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An article in the Post this morning recycles the way old news that Elizabeth Stribling, the founder of Stribling & Associates, is moving from the Upper East Side to One Brooklyn Bridge Park, but it also drops some tantalizing info about other sales at the massive conversion. Turns out that six sales in the building are record breakers for a Brooklyn condo, all going for more than $3.8 million, the previous condo sales record in Kings (that would be at Williamsburg’s Aurora). Stribling’s 3,442-square-foot pad cost $6.6 million. The development (which is currently being advertised on Brownstoner) is also setting records for the priciest parking spaces at a Brooklyn condo: Each is going for between $128,590 and $281,050. More than one-third of the 1BPP’s 449 units are now sold (that’s a jump over November, when 100 were in contract and sales were pending on another 25) and move-ins will begin next month. The building’s developer, Robert Levine, is happy with the pace of sales at the luxury building: “Considering the state of the economic environment, we’re doing very well.”
B’Klyn Beckons [NY Post]
Stribling Sells Herself Two Penthouses at 1BBP [Brownstoner]
Update on One Brooklyn Bridge Park [Brownstoner]


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  1. Just walked down 7th Avenue and the warm spring day seems to have the masses in Park Slope hungry for real estate. I could barely find a place to squeeze in and look at the window of Brown Harris Stevens and Heights Berkeley Real Estate.

    Will be interesting to see what spring brings.

  2. I went to two open houses over the weekend and they were moribund. I was the only visitor at one of them. The broker said that the “market had slowed”. I wanted to get to 1 BBP, but couldn’t. The place looks awesome from the outside.

  3. you haven’t looked at real estate much if you’ve never had to wait outside. OR you’re looking at much bigger places than the avg 2 bedroom floor thru, etc.

    I sold my last place when the market was at a fever-pitch (Fall 2006) and we had 250 sign-ins (so possibly 2x that many people) in two hours. Even if you had 10 people in every room all the time, there wasn’t room. People had to wait outside.

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