Top 10 Brooklyn Real Estate Listings: Federal Style in Brooklyn Heights, Prewar in Jackson Heights
The most popular listings on Brownstoner this week include a Bed Stuy brownstone dripping with details, a concrete manse in the Hudson Valley and a modern revamp in Park Slope.

The most popular listings on Brownstoner this week include a Bed Stuy brownstone dripping with details, a concrete manse in the Hudson Valley and a modern revamp in Park Slope.
Other popular listings include homes beyond Brooklyn this week, with listings in Queens and Ossining, N.Y. The least expensive of the group is a Sunset Park co-op at $700,000 and the most expensive is a Federal clapboard frame house in Brooklyn Heights at $4.995 million.
Which would you choose?
10. Here’s a two-bedroom duplex co-op with high ceilings and a smattering of original details. Located at 50 Sterling Place, it spans the parlor floor and garden level of a circa 1874 Italianate brownstone.
50 Sterling Place
Price: $1.995 million
Area: Park Slope
Broker: Halstead (Rachel Wood, Scott Olsen)
Park Slope Duplex Co-op With Stained Glass, Built-Ins, Arched Nook Asks $1.995 Million
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9. This spacious two-family brownstone in Bed Stuy is a jaw-dropper that offers a motherlode of intact detail. Built in 1888 and designed by Axel Hedman, it’s located at 364 Jefferson Avenue.
364 Jefferson Avenue
Price: $2.75 million
Area: Bed Stuy
Broker: Corcoran (Karen and Kyle Talbott)
Grand Renaissance Revival-Style Brownstone in Bed Stuy With Lavish Detail Asks $2.75 Million
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8. It’s been known by more than a few names over the years and has had an equal number of uses. But by any name or use this house in Ossining, N.Y. has always been a bit unusual.
36 South Highland Avenue
Price: $965,000
Area: Ossining, N.Y.
Broker: William Raveis (Jean Cameron-Smith, Heather Bouza)
Become the Squire of this Eclectic 19th Century Concrete Manse in Ossining
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7. This three-bedroom co-op in Queens is in The Chateau, a neo-French Renaissance building in Jackson Heights completed in 1922. The complex includes 12 five- and six-story U-shaped buildings with a common landscaped garden.
34-21 80th Street #32
Price: $850,000
Area: Jackson Heights
Broker: Douglas Elliman (Jon Fisher)
Four Prewar Apartments in Queens With Working Fireplaces, Starting at $518K
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6. Here’s a two-bedroom co-op in Laburnum Court in Jackson Heights, Queens. Completed in 1922, the neo-Georgian complex by architect George H. Wells includes eight five-story buildings along a common garden.
37-28 80th Street #31
Price: $729,000
Area: Jackson Heights
Broker: Remax Team (Vincent O Connell)
Four Prewar Apartments in Queens With Working Fireplaces, Starting at $518K
See it here ->
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5. This four-bedroom apartment is in one of Jackson Heights’ fanciest buildings, The Towers. Designed by Andrew J. Thomas and completed in 1925, the neo-Romanesque complex includes eight six-story U-shaped buildings, which share a landscaped garden.
33-51 80th Street #51
Price: $1.4 million
Area: Jackson Heights
Broker: Douglas Elliman (Jon Fisher)
Four Prewar Apartments in Queens With Working Fireplaces, Starting at $518K
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4. Here’s a chance to own a remarkable house and a piece of Brooklyn history. It’s the Federal clapboard frame house that’s regularly cited as one of the oldest houses in Brooklyn Heights.
24 Middagh Street
Price: $4.995 million
Area: Brooklyn Heights
Broker: Corcoran (Jessica Buchman, Bryan Rettaliata)
One of the Oldest in Brooklyn Heights, This Federal Clapboard House Wants $4.995 Million
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3. Here’s a genuine two-bedroom in Sunset Park, something that doesn’t come along every day. In a four-story, 16-unit building, it’s well located to boot, right across from the neighborhood’s titular park.
570 44th Street #11
Price: $700,000
Area:Sunset Park
Broker: Halstead (Joanna Mayfield Marks)
Spacious Two-Bedroom Co-op in Sunset Park With Views, Prewar Details Wants $700K
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2. Here’s a completely modern design executed inside an 1880s Park Slope townhouse. Not a typical flip, the architects clearly had a strong, modern vision for the home.
297 11th Street
Price: $3.679 million
Area: Park Slope
Broker: Dwell Residential (Myrta Echevarria, Valerie Wright)
Park Slope Townhouse With Horizontal Fence, Modern Interior Asks $3.679 Million
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1. Out in Red Hook, we have a modern renovation of a wood-frame home. This four-bedroom single-family row house on Dikeman Street has loads of high-end finishes.
34 Dikeman Street
Price: $2.250 million
Area: Red Hook
Broker: Realty Collective (Jane Herro, Christina Fallon)
Renaissance Revival in Crown Heights and Three More to See This Weekend, Starting at $699,999
See it here ->
Related Stories
- Find Your Dream Home in Brooklyn and Beyond With the New Brownstoner Real Estate
- Top 10 Brooklyn Real Estate Listings: A Wood Frame in Bushwick, a Brownstone in Fort Greene
- Top 10 Brooklyn Real Estate Listings: A Townhouse in Sunset Park, a Co-op in Brooklyn Heights
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