Co-op of the Day: 75 Henry Street, #19A
This one-bedroom co-op is one of the nicer ones we’ve seen at 75 Henry Street. The views from the 19th floor don’t hurt, but the recent renovation itself looks quite nice. For a full-service building, the monthly maintenance of $794 is pretty reasonable for the 750-square-foot pad. There’s also a balcony thrown into the mix….

This one-bedroom co-op is one of the nicer ones we’ve seen at 75 Henry Street. The views from the 19th floor don’t hurt, but the recent renovation itself looks quite nice. For a full-service building, the monthly maintenance of $794 is pretty reasonable for the 750-square-foot pad. There’s also a balcony thrown into the mix. The price was just reduced from $595,000 to $565,000. There’s an open house on Sunday from 12 to 1:30. You likey?
75 Henry Street, #19A [Corcoran] GMAP P*Shark
I agree with Denton. When I first moved to Brooklyn Heights into a pre-war apartment, I sort of sniffed at this 60s behemoth’s exterior. Now that I’ve been inside several units, I have a much more favorable impression. The outside will never win a beauty contest with a 19th century townhouse, but the insides (at least the renovated units) are pretty nice for the price point.
Nice layout, livable rooms. Apts for the middle class sure were built nicer back in the day.
Is it true they don’t allow dogs? that is a big minus.
as does “my last most made no sense”
“ignore my last post” kinda goes without saying, no?
wait my last post made no sense… if there’s no dogs allowed in this building, then it most likely doesnt smell like pee. contrary to what people think, the pee smell in big buildings like this usually isnt from humans, it’s from animals who dont get walked enough, or hold it in enough to make it down all those floors. and if the dog smells another dog that peed in the elevator after it already did, it’s instinct might be to as well. so anyway, ignore my last post!
*rob*
> the one real problem with big buildings like this is that
> they always seem to smell like urine
I live in a large building. My boyfriend lives in a large building. Several of my friends live in large buildings. Not one of those builidings has that problem.
Consider traveling in different circles.
Or give yourself a sniff test.
Somebody also apparently thinks it will go for $70k over ask even though there was just a $30k price drop. I think there is a fair amount of widget manipulation every time, though it seems the two sides balance each other out.
“brooklynishome, no, you wouldn’t like Brooklyn Heights. Better stick with Billyburg if sharing a neighborhood with people of all ages offends you.”
You’re a douche