Top 5 Stories on Brownstoner This Week: A Tour of the Pavilion Theater and a Wood-Frame Survivor
Popular stories this week include a photo tour of the former Pavilion Theatre, a look at a Queen Anne mansion that hit the market in Crown Heights and the history of a charming wood-frame house in Boerum Hill.

Semi-Detached Queen Anne in Crown Heights With Carriage House, Ionic Columns Asks $3.499 Million
Here’s an interesting one — a 19th century, semi-detached Queen Anne style mansion with an SRO designation, an oversized lot and a split level carriage house in the rear. A three-story with a gabled roof, an Ionic-columned front porch and a brick and brownstone facade, it sits at 669 Saint Marks Avenue in Crown Heights, where it was built in 1891, according to the listing.
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Windsor Terrace Brick Row House With English Basement, Near Prospect Park Asks $1.995 Million
This two-story, barrel-fronted brick row house in Windsor Terrace is attractive and in good repair, with six rooms on the top floor that offer a fair amount of flexibility. And it’s well located at 55 Sherman Street, within respectable reach of Prospect Park.
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Park Slope Three-Bedroom With Bay Windows Overlooking Prospect Park Asks $3,995 a Month
This Park Slope walk-up offers bay windows with a view of Prospect Park, prewar details and three decent sized bedrooms at a price that looks pretty reasonable. It’s on the fourth floor at 164 Prospect Park West, a 25-unit condo building at the corner of 11th Street.
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The Former Pavilion Theater Is Getting Ready for Its Nitehawk Debut (Photos)
The transformation of the former Pavilion Theater in Park Slope is getting closer to reality as Nitehawk Cinema pushes forward on its revamp of the beleaguered theater. Brownstoner got a hard-hat tour and a peek inside the renovation Tuesday.
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A Cozy Wood-Frame Survivor in Boerum Hill
For many, this little frame Italianate at 143 Bond Street in the Boerum Hill Historic District is housing perfection. I tend to agree. It’s in great shape, in a great neighborhood, and has lots of room around it. It’s cozy, and scaled to a comfortable living scale, and for a single person or a couple, would give them room to live, work and still have a guest over once in a while. What’s not to like?
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