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Holy Moly! This has got to be the nicest house on the market right now. It’s a 25-foot-wide Greek Revival house overlooking Verandah Park in Cobble Hill with a stand-alone carriage house in the rear. All in, it’s got 7,000 square feet of living space and enough parking space for four cars. Judging from the photos, there’s recently been a top-of-the-line renovation as well that preserved the house’s many original details while creating a beautiful, huge modern kitchen. Okay, so the desirability of the house ain’t in question. How about the price? Think $8.75 million will fly? This would have to be a record for Cobble Hill, wouldn’t it?
Magnificent Townhouse & Carriage House [Brown Harris Stevens]


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  1. See PShark 8/3/2004, he sold the facade to the National Architectural Trust Inc. … that tax dodge thing. Shady.

    Also, 4:45pm, I work on Wall St. and while there are people making big bucks, it is very, very unlikely that a 22 year-old right out of undergrad is making $1 million a year at a hedge fund (unless he’s the founder’s kid or his mistress).

  2. Yes, Parker Posey just sold her place in the East Village, and she’s looking for a new pad.

    Would not at all be surprised to find her turn up in Brooklyn.

    Think this place is even a little pricey for her though. She can’t afford it.

    She sold her EV place for 1.1 million.

    Wall Streeters…the successful ones make 8 million in a year. Easy.

    Some of you have NO concept, apparently.

    My friend just out of college at 22 years old was making a million bucks TO START at a Hedge Fund.

    Get your heads out of your asses.

  3. Other shit like that place in Gravesend went for 10 million.

    And I think something at One Brooklyn Bridge Park got something near that too.

    This looks like an incredible home.

    8.75 million gets you a nice 2-3 bedroom at the Plaza.

    Or this.

  4. 4:23 – I think its hard for you to understand what wall street types can get paid. You read about it but until you are around it, its difficult to comprehend. You start out of school making decent money, nothing special. Parents ask how much you’re making. At some point you dodge the question because their reaction starts to gets embarassing. If you do well you’ll make multiples of what your parents make in a few years. If you manage to survive 10-15 years, you will either be running a business or decide you’ve made enough to last a lifetime. If you end up running a business that later blows up, you take your stuff home and hang out with the kid until your wife makes you look for something to do to get you out of the house.

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