Co-op of the Day: 135 Prospect Park SW
Return of the stuffed animal photos! Our furry friend was last spotted in a studio in Prospect Heights and now has popped up in this two-bedroom co-op at 135 Prospect Park Southwest in Windsor Terrace. In case you couldn’t tell from the Home Depot-esque kitchen, the listing is a sponsor unit–so no board approval required….

Return of the stuffed animal photos! Our furry friend was last spotted in a studio in Prospect Heights and now has popped up in this two-bedroom co-op at 135 Prospect Park Southwest in Windsor Terrace. In case you couldn’t tell from the Home Depot-esque kitchen, the listing is a sponsor unit–so no board approval required. You will be required to pony up a modest monthly maintenance of $670. The asking price is $639,000. By comparison, we featured a one-bedroom in the building in March asking $399,000 that appears to have gone into contract already.
135 Prospect Park SW [Arlene Greendlinger] GMAP P*Shark
windsor terrace guy: who asked you?
Mckenzie I suggest you move to Cleveland anyway.
I have trouble falling asleep without city noises in the distance, traffic, the ocassional siren, voices coming home late from a date.
What I absolutely hate are crickets. When I go to the country and there is no human noise at night but this incessant cricket noise!! I really can’t stand it. crickets give me the creeps.
But her site only has three photos and no more info .. . . OK, I’ll stop now.
I hope people realized i was being sarcastic by my first post regarding the stuffed animal
I like WT though – however I do think this price has to come down!!!
what means “old-school Brooklyn renter?” I rent. So do plenty of others and I know plenty of owners I wouldn’t want to live next to either- especially the ones who police the street in their muu-muus and hair rollers.
Oh. Sorry. Just saw the link to her site . . .
Um, I want to live in NYC AND have some quiet at home . . .
How can anyone evaluate this place with no floorplan, no sq footage, and pictures the size of large postage stamps?
It’s probably a decent apartment. I don’t understand why any agent, even an idiosyncratic one like this, would want to show it off as little as possible. I don’t get it. People who don’t happen to know the building, area, etc., are likely to look at a comparable, or even less desirable place if the presentation is good. Good, meaning at least enough to get some sense of the space.
“And the quietest.”
Why do people make a big deal about how quiet the neighborhood is?
If I wanted to live in a quiet (ie: dead) neighborhhod, I could live in Cleveland for one quarter the cost of NYC.