Condo of the Day: 85 North 3rd Street, #412
This new listing at the Mill Building in Williamsburg is gorgeous. The 2,295-square-foot loft has beautiful original floor and exposed wood beams as well as tastefully modern kitchen and bathrooms. Pretty much the perfect mix when it comes to a loft. The fourth-floor pad sold for $1,349,256 back in 2007 and is now asking $1,695,000….

This new listing at the Mill Building in Williamsburg is gorgeous. The 2,295-square-foot loft has beautiful original floor and exposed wood beams as well as tastefully modern kitchen and bathrooms. Pretty much the perfect mix when it comes to a loft. The fourth-floor pad sold for $1,349,256 back in 2007 and is now asking $1,695,000. We bet they’ll get it.
85 North 3rd Street [Corcoran] GMAP P*Shark
Wow, delusion.
11217 – You need help.
“You can buy a cheaper loft in Tribeca. Which is a real neighborhood compared to Williamsburg. ”
AHAHAHAHHAHA – that’s FUNNY!
You can buy a cheaper loft in Tribeca. Which is a real neighborhood compared to Williamsburg.
HAters hate.
If you had the $$$ to buy the apartment, you probably would have the $$$ to change anything that you did not like.
Isn’t that what usually happens? It it called renovation. It is called decorating. It is called personalizing.
“I think more builders should give the people a choice of cabinetry, tiles and that type of stuff, instead of assuming everyone like the same shit.”
this is a resale – wtf are you talking about?
For this kind of money, “I” want to pick out the cabinets that “I” want to look at, not the builders taste. “I” want to pick out what kind of bathroom tiles “I” want to look at in my bathroom, not the same as everyone else in the building.
I think more builders should give the people a choice of cabinetry, tiles and that type of stuff, instead of assuming everyone like the same shit.
Especially since everything is so expensive.It would be nice to have something that the actual buyer picked out.
The home office looks like it does have a window, or something that seems like one on the floor plan, though it’s drawn differently than the other windows, and if it was a window, it’d seem like there’d be one in the bathroom or maybe another on that wall in the bedroom? But if that’s not a window, what is it?
I take it the home office means no window. All the windows on one side? Place seems like a huge amount of wasted space, especially that bath and hallway.
I happen to live in the building and am on the Board so let me straighten a few things out.
Not everything that happens in the RE market is captured by Streeteasy or other sites. We have had several recent sales ALL at prices greater than the original offering.
There are very few original artists/renters left in the buidling. Most have moved, flipped their units, or otherwise left.
The common charges are low, about 50 cents a foot. We are a full service buidling. Doorman and garage. We keep the buidling really nice. Our staff does a great job.
While we have a large common roof deck with great views, this unit has its own private roof deck of approximately 900 square feet. Fourteen of the units have private roof decks of similar of larger dimensions.
The bathroom are not modern. THey are marble and really nice. The fixtures are modern, but that is easily changed.
And what is wrong with a huge kitchen with Wolf ranges, Subzero frig, Bosch dishwasher and high end German cabinets that you cannot slam? You want lower quality fixtures?
The Edge and other new developments do not have the space(square footage) or the ceiling heights that we do. Twelve foot on the lower floors and fifteen on the higher ones.
The Mill Building is the best building in a great neighborhood. The units have been holding their prices and ALL have sold above their original prices. Offering prices are just that, an offering of a starting point.
Quality holds its value.