Checking In On 110 4th Avenue
We checked in with the broker overseeing the rental process at 110 4th Avenue in Park Slope yesterday to see how it was going. To date, they’ve rented about 20 percent of the 49 units. According to a price list we saw, monthly rents range from $1,865 for a second-floor studio to $4,100 for a…

We checked in with the broker overseeing the rental process at 110 4th Avenue in Park Slope yesterday to see how it was going. To date, they’ve rented about 20 percent of the 49 units. According to a price list we saw, monthly rents range from $1,865 for a second-floor studio to $4,100 for a sixth-floor two-bedroom. The broker, who also deals with other properties in the area, said that in general the rental market in Park Slope had been weakening, saying that a two-bedroom that would have rented for $2,500 last year would now go for $2,200. Sound about right?
110 4th Avenue Starts Renting [Brownstoner] GMAP
Facade Revealed at 4th and Warren [Brownstoner]
Development Watch: 110 4th Avenue Topping Out [Brownstoner]
snark – got it. Maybe my snarkdar is not working properly today.
lechacal – I’m pretty sure tybur6 was being snarky.
Our beautifully renovated garden floor one-bedroom on a tree-lined block in Prospect Heights 5 minutes from 2 subway lines rents for $1,800. Why would anyone pay more for a studio on 4th Ave???
Agree that this building is marginally less of an eyesore than the most of the new development on the new “Park Ave” of Park Slope. But overall it’s heartbreaking that the rezoning didn’t come with some basic aesthetic standards and/or an overall streetscape vision that developers would have been obliged to comply with. I LOVE modern architecture but the new buildings on 4th Ave represent a major lost opportunity to do something innovative. The Boymelgreen monstrosity nr 3rd St especially gets my goat. The massive blank streetwall is g–awful. And why no decent retail to create streetlife? Just a medical office. Jeez, are we back to the late 70s/early 80s when the only viable commercial tenants were methadone clinics and kidney dialysis offices?
Reminds me of when Kenny Rogers moved across the street from Kramer…
tyburg6 is way off on the market rate for Lee’s place. 3950 will get you a nice 3 bed in north slope right now. You can even get a decent 3 bed for a bunch less than that. I’m not familiar with the rental market for an 800 sf 2 bed but I wouldn’t be at all surprised if the market rate were below 3000.
I assume the agent for this property is Ideal Properties. They opened up a snappy new office on Berkeley and 7th Ave a few months back. I seem to recall they work on a lot of the new construction rental properties.
Ave A/B/C/D is not all of LES and East Village.
There is Essex, Lafayette, area which is far better than PS in regards to restaurants, bars, shopping and etc. It is not family friendly or quiet. But if you are 20 something, pretty sure LES and East Village makes more sense than PS.
(and I have property in PS).
I prefer Popeye’s when I’m in that mood.
Dang, now I’m in that mood, but I’m in midtown.
I’ve never had KFC.
> “There’s a KFC on East 14th Street.”
I had a friend who used to live down the street from a KFC in Cambridge. The aroma would waft through her windows and skylight constantly. To this day she cannot eat fried chicken of any sort.