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Except for the recessed lighting on the parlor floor (and the lack of some crown moldings), the brownstone at 106 Lincoln Place in Park Slope is looking pretty tasty. (The single-family house is one of six in a row designed by Brooklyn architect F. B. Langston in the late 1880s.) There’s some drool-worthy woodwork and a permanent parking space to boot. The price of $3,150,000 feels pretty 2007 to us but it’s certainly not impossible for something like this in move-in condition.
106 Lincoln Place [Corcoran] GMAP P*Shark


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  1. I have recessed lighting in my Hummer, which I park on top of my garden in my brownstone. Every day I have my gardener replant my garden so that I have something nice to park on when I get home. I will paint my house yellow and orange and rack-up LPC violations because it pisses off my neighbors, and I can afford it.

  2. Having on-site parking is very different from being in a public lot. Your car is right there when you want it – no walking to the garage and waiting for the attendant; you don’t have to unload at your house, then drive to the garage, then walk back home; if you’re leaving early in the morning you can pack the car the night before; if your kid leaves his bookbag in the car you don’t have to hike however many blocks to retrieve it.

    That seems like the kind of convenience a person in the market for a $3 million house might be willing to pay for.

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