The most popular listings on Brownstoner this week include a Greek Revival in Brooklyn Heights, a renovated single-family in Flatbush and a compact co-op in Park Slope.

The top listings are scattered across the borough this week, with Park Slope, Brooklyn Heights and Windsor Terrace among the popular neighborhoods. The least expensive is a petite co-op in Brooklyn Heights at $725,000 and the most expensive is the famed Coignet Building at $6.5 million.

Which would you choose?

10. A compact two-bedroom co-op is on the market in a Rosario Candela-designed prewar elevator building facing Grand Army Plaza.

39 plaza street west
Photo via The Corcoran Group

39 Plaza Street West #6C
Price: $1.165 million
Area: Park Slope
Broker: Corcoran (Mary Elizabeth Smith, Paul Hansen)
Co-op in Jazz-Age Candela-Designed Building at Grand Army Plaza in Park Slope Asks $1.165 Million
See it here ->

9. In Bay Ridge here’s a circa 1900 gray brick three-story row house with a bow front. Inside, there is ornamental crown molding, mantels with columns, a pier mirror and other details to see.

bay ridge

538 72nd Street
Price: $1.57 million
Area: Bay Ridge
Broker: Winzone Realty Inc (Huizhen Li)
Move-in-Ready Houses With Circa-1900 Details to See This Weekend, Starting at $899K
See it here ->

8. A well-preserved row house in Crown Heights is part of a row of adorable two-story homes with decorative toppers.

1062 union st
Photo by Alyson Lubow via The Corcoran Group

1062 Union Street
Price: $1.495 million
Area: Crown Heights
Broker: Corcoran (Josiane Lysius, Joseph Dima)
‘Artistic’ Home in Crown Heights With Window Seat, Sunroom Near Park Asks $1.495 Million
See it here ->

7. This circa 1852 Greek Revival is a 25.5-foot-wide five-story brick townhouse with brownstone trim and a genteel interior possessing plenty of detail, if not necessarily all original.

18 remsen
Photo by Jon Nissenbaum, courtesy of The Corcoran Group

18 Remsen Street
Price: $9.75 million
Area: Brooklyn Heights
Broker: Corcoran (James Cornell, Leslie Marshall)
Greek Revival Near Heights Promenade With Manhattan View From Terrace Asks $9.75 Million
See it here ->

6. Here’s a modest two-story early 20th century single-family brick house with a porch and striped retractable awning that is for sale in Windsor Terrace.

179 seeley
Photo by Al Siedman, courtesy of The Corcoran Group

179 Seeley Street
Price: $1.895 million
Area: Windsor Terrace
Broker: Corcoran (Marie Lee Parker)
Simple Brick House in Windsor Terrace With Period Details, Tasteful Improvements Asks $1.895 Million
See it here ->


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5. This renovated bay-fronted yellow-brick early 20th century single-family row house in Flatbush looks to be in good condition, with original details like doors and trim with fluting and corner blocks.

162 east 22nd street

162 East 22nd Street
Price: $848,900
Area: Flatbush
Broker: MC Realty Consulting & Management Inc. (Marcia Clarke)
Edwardian Yellow-Brick Row House With Original Details, Updates in Flatbush Asks $848,900
See it here ->

4. In Midwood, close to Brooklyn College, an early 20th century single-family detached home with a two-car garage and driveway is recently renovated.

ditmas park

900 E 21st Street
Price: $1.5 million
Area: Midwood
Broker: Keller Williams Realty Liberty (Valerie Shalomoff)
Move-in-Ready Houses With Circa-1900 Details to See This Weekend, Starting at $899K
See it here ->

3. Here’s an unusual (for Park Slope) early- to mid-19th-century wood-frame home with a porch, wide-plank floors and a brick carriage house in the rear.

brooklyn

237 14th Street
Price: $2.5 million
Area: Park Slope
Broker: Douglas Elliman (Rita Van Straten, Robert Gross)
A Collection of Detail-Rich Homes — One With a Carriage House — to See, Starting at $1.795 Million
See it here ->

2. A petite but flexible one- or two-bedroom apartment in a circa 1860s brownstone mansion has grand details and is move-in ready.

114 remsen street
Photo via The Corcoran Group

114 Remsen Street
Price: $725,000
Area: Brooklyn Heights
Broker: Corcoran (Deborah Rieders, Sarah Shuken)
Brooklyn Heights Brownstone Co-op With High Ceilings, Big Windows, Elevator Asks $725K
See it here ->

1. Beautifully restored in 2016 after decades of decay, Gowanus’ landmarked Coignet Building is back on the market and asking $6.5 million.

coigne stone
Photo by by Vanessa DeGarcia via The Corcoran Group

360 3rd Avenue
Price: $6.5 million
Area: Gowanus
Broker: Corcoran (Vanessa DeGarcia, Erica Nieves-Negron)
Gowanus’ Famed and Landmarked Coignet Building Hits Market for $6.5 Million
See it here ->

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