Residential Sales in Brooklyn
PARK SLOPE $1,800,000 447 14th Street GMAP 106-year-old, 3 -story brick 2-family house being used as a 1-family; 7 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms; living-room fireplace, parquet floors, c/a, original detail, 18-by-100-foot lot; taxes $4,213; listed at $1,850,000. Broker: Warren Lewis. Photo by Kate Leonova for Property Shark. WILLIAMSBURG $725,000 226 Richardson Street GMAP 1,610-square-foot condo in…

PARK SLOPE $1,800,000
447 14th Street GMAP
106-year-old, 3 -story brick 2-family house being used as a 1-family; 7 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms; living-room fireplace, parquet floors, c/a, original detail, 18-by-100-foot lot; taxes $4,213; listed at $1,850,000. Broker: Warren Lewis. Photo by Kate Leonova for Property Shark.
WILLIAMSBURG $725,000
226 Richardson Street GMAP
1,610-square-foot condo in a new building; dining area, eat-in kitchen, c/a, hardwood floors, terrace, 2 exposures; common charge $490; taxes $1,191; listed at $775,000. Broker: Developers Group.
Residential Sales [NY Times]
the DOB doesn’t usually have dates of construction from prior to 1900.
Virtually every 19th century building in the city has a date of construction that is 1900 or 1901.
In any event, the entire neighborhood was fully developed by 1890. By 1900, the many single family homes in the city were being razed to build apartment buildings. There were almost no single-family homes being constructed in Park Slope in the entire 20th century.
boring. yet another day of debate over how big the house is and whether it’s worth the money someone paid for it. the deal is done, the house has 3 floors, half the bedrooms in brownstone brooklyn don’t qualify for a legal bedroom by todays code. so what? and… plenty of park slope was in fact built around 1901. the building boom went from around 1885 – 1910 or so.
“Almost all Park Slope was built around 1901”
-WRONG!
you need to take an architural history class.
Also, the house is two stories plus basement. If you want to count the cellar, you can call it four stories.
to fit that many bedrooms, some of them need to be stacked sideways. in an 18-footer, that results in some pretty tiny rooms. the new owner will (or should) knock down walls to create fewer but bigger rooms.
I own a house around the same size as this house, if it has 7 bedrooms than there is no family room and the bedrooms are tiny.
Almost all of PS was built around 1901. I’ve heard DOB burned twice since then so no specific records on many houses. 1880 would be a stretch.
Not that small. Its a THREE story. Top 2 floors are bedrooms. 4 bedrooms could easily fit on 1 floor if the building is long enough. Maybe 2 are small – fine for babis/kids. 3 more bedrooms on the other floor. Bottom floor is kitchen/living room.
Also, no way the Park Slope house was built in 1901.
1880 more likely. Nothing about this write up is credible.
Smoke and mirrors, Alice in Wonderland.
Boy, that is a lot of dough for a small house on 14th Street. I don’t see how it could have 7 bedrooms unless they put beds in the parlor and kitchen. It is only a two story house on an 18 foot lot!
This is Alice in Wonderland stuff.
Mad Hatter Realty Inc.
It’s a nice looking block and near the park. I wonder what the inside looks like. Is there still a listing up? Maybe with pics of the inside?