The most popular listings on Brownstoner this week include a co-op in Clinton Hill, a brownstone in Prospect Heights and a detached brick house in Dyker Heights.

It is another week where listings are dotted around the borough, this time from Marine Park to Brooklyn Heights. The least expensive is a Prospect Heights rental at $7,250 a month and the most expensive is a Brooklyn Heights row house asking $7.25 million.

Which would you choose?

10. While it’s not exactly cheap, this upper duplex for rent in a Prospect Heights Queen Anne row house would seem to check a lot of boxes, especially for a family. Mixing modern functionality with historic details, it has three bedrooms and 2.5 bathrooms, for starters.

interior of apt 2 598 bergen street

598 Bergen Street #2
Price: $7,250 a month
Area: Prospect Heights
Broker: Corcoran (Karen Talbott)
Family-Sized Prospect Heights Duplex With Mantels, Central Air, Garden Wants $7,250
See it here ->

9. It has the narrow width of a classic Anglo-Italianate but this renovated Brooklyn Heights two-family has an expansive five floors of living space — and the means to access it via the rare amenity of an elevator.

interior of 28 willow street

28 Willow Street
Price: $7.25 million
Area: Brooklyn Heights
Broker: Brown Harris Stevens (Ciro Scala)
Brooklyn Heights Anglo-Italianate With Wood Burning Fireplaces, Elevator Asks $7.25 Million
See it here ->

8. In Dyker Heights, an early 20th century semi-detached brick house with a garage is move-in ready and has fun updates as well as original details. The single-family has mini split air conditioning, three bedrooms and two bathrooms.

dining room of 1032 76th street

1032 76th Street
Price: $1,198,888
Area: Dyker Heights
Broker: RE/MAX Elite (Robert Coppolino, Joseph Madaio)
Jazz Age-Era Dyker Heights House With Garage and Three Others to See, Starting at $915K
See it here ->

7. Petite yet grand at the same time, this studio apartment on the garden floor of a brownstone offers a relatively low price tag close to amenities such as Prospect Park and Grand Army Plaza.

interior of apt #bf at 19 7th avenue

19 7th Avenue #BF
Price: $399,000
Area: Park Slope
Broker: Corcoran (Carol Graham, Jennifer Wilson)
Park Slope Studio With Working Fireplace, Five Windows in Neo-Grec Brownstone Asks $399K
See it here ->

6. In Red Hook, a mid-19th century brick house has lost its cornice and acquired a stucco coating but retains its historic ironwork. In use as a single-family (though it is technically two), the row house channels rustic chic with wide plank floors; exposed beams, bricks and mechanicals; and two unfitted kitchens.

interior of 91 pioneer street

91 Pioneer Street
Price: $1.595 million
Area: Red Hook
Broker: Compass (Orren Azani)
A Dutch Colonial Revival With Garage in Flatlands and Two More to See, Starting at $800K
See it here ->


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5. In the Cobble Hill Historic District, this brownstone has some period details, like plasterwork and marble mantels, along with an updated kitchen.

interior of 52 tompkins place

52 Tompkins Place
Price: $6.49 million
Area: Cobble Hill
Broker: Brown Harris Stevens (Kristi Spessard Azaroff, Michael Petrosino)
Cobble Hill Brownstone With Three Working Fireplaces, Formal Garden Asks $6.495 Million
See it here ->

4. In addition to the vintage details that might appeal to lovers of the period, this 1930s Marine Park brick Tudor also offers a garage and a location just a short stroll from the neighborhood’s eponymous park.

exterior of 3615 avenue t

3615 Avenue T
Price: $865,000
Area: Marine Park
Broker: RE/MAX Edge (Gennadi B. Barmin)
Marine Park Tudor With Original ‘Domestic Science’ Kitchen Cabinets, Deco Bath, Garage Asks $865K
See it here ->

3. Here’s a 19th century apartment that has been modernized with an open kitchen, arches and some fun bathroom tile, but the woodwork and floors remain.

interior of apt 31 275 clinton avenue

275 Clinton Avenue #31
Price: $1.899 million
Area: Clinton Hill
Broker: Brown Harris Stevens (Jeffrey Mandelbaum, Kenneth Gene Mandelbaum)
Big, Airy Three-Bedroom With Two Baths in 1897 Clinton Hill Elevator Building Asks $1.899 Million
See it here ->

2. A circa 1870 Italianate in the Prospect Heights Historic District has carved marble mantels, tall arched doors, wainscoting, shutters and wood floors.

interior of 149 prospect place

149 Prospect Place
Price: $4 million
Area: Prospect Heights
Broker: Compass (Ian Mednick)
A Prospect Heights Italianate Brownstone and Two More to See, Starting at $1.595 Million
See it here ->

1. In the Stuyvesant Heights Historic District, a circa 1900 townhouse dressed in pale stone has encaustic tile in the entry, fretwork, mantels, moldings, tin ceilings, bead board and original shutters.

interior of 83 chauncey

83 Chauncey Street
Price: $1.595 million
Area: Bed Stuy
Broker: Compass (Debra Bondy)
A Prospect Heights Italianate Brownstone and Two More to See, Starting at $1.595 Million
See it here ->

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