Just Sold in Brooklyn
BROOKLYN HEIGHTS $440,000 150 Joralemon Street GMAP Prewar one-bedroom, 1 1/2–bath co-op, 800 square feet, with 11-foot ceilings and hardwood floors; building is pet-friendly and features rec room, storage, bike room and live-in super. Maintenance $1,301, 53 percent tax-deductible. Asking price $455,000, on market four weeks. Brokers: Robert Frye, Brooklyn Heights Real Estate and Donna…

BROOKLYN HEIGHTS $440,000
150 Joralemon Street GMAP
Prewar one-bedroom, 1 1/2–bath co-op, 800 square feet, with 11-foot ceilings and hardwood floors; building is pet-friendly and features rec room, storage, bike room and live-in super. Maintenance $1,301, 53 percent tax-deductible. Asking price $455,000, on market four weeks. Brokers: Robert Frye, Brooklyn Heights Real Estate and Donna Trip, Prudential Douglas Elliman.
BROOKLYN HEIGHTS $899,000
33 Willow Street GMAP
Three-bedroom, two-bath co-op, 600 square feet, withtiled bath, chef’s kitchen with stone counters and Sub-Zero, Miele and Thermador appliances, laundry room, E/W exposures and storage. Maintenance $984, 47 percent tax-deductible. Asking price $899,000, on market 14 weeks. Brokers: Betul Ekmecki, Halstead Property and The Corcoran Group.
PROSPECT-LEFFERTS GARDENS $675,000
19 Maple Street GMAP
Four-bedroom, two-bath, two-story brick townhouse, 2,400 square feet, with dining room, sunroom, finished basement, original details, shared driveway and two-car garage. Asking price $750,000, on market 10 weeks. Broker: Linda VanderWoude, Halstead Property. Photo by Nicholas Strini for Property Shark,
WILLIAMSBURG $730,000
117 South Third Street GMAP
Two-bedroom, two-bath condo, 1,126 square feet, with central AC, high ceilings, washer/dryer hookup, hardwood floors and balcony; new development features elevator, roof deck, laundry and storage facilities. Common charges $173, taxes $63 (tax-abated for 15 years). Asking price $765,000, on market four weeks. Broker: Levi Chow, The Developers Group.
Just Sold! [NY Post]
“i guess i don’t understand why for the same money, one wouldn’t choose prospect heights over plg. closer to manhattan, nice restaurants on vandy, park also right there, etc.”
A couple of reasons to choose PLG over PH
1. existance of a HD, plus single family covenant and zoning (in Lefferts Manor), thus less chance of a POS Fedders bldg being built next to your house
2. PLG doesn’t border AY
That sounds right to me. I think BedStuy is safer than PLG. Parts of it much safer.
i know no one wants to hear this, but i feel safer in more parts of bed stuy than i do in most parts of plg.
everyone’s got different and varying thresholds for comfort, however.
PH is much safer than PLG though
meant to say that you couldn’t find a PH place of the same quality and size for the same price as you’d pay for an equivalent place in PLG…
3.53 – rarely, if ever, would you be able to find something of the same size and quality in P Heights as you would in PLG. PHeights is much more expensive nowadays than PLG.
I’ve lived in PLG for two years now and I hate it. It’s convenient for us in a number of ways, especially my wife, but we’re going to move before long.
welcome Webster… We were also PLG or bust when we were looking for a home. True, there are a few too many hair and nail salons for my liking, but it’s a great place to live.
Bob, that’s how permits work all over the US. permits allow residents to park overnight. Except for Bostonm which has crazier rules. Still, people are able to park where they live