House of the Day: 274 Lafayette Avenue
This may be a first: Creating a name for the purpose of marketing a one-family brownstone! In this case, the four-story brownstone at 274 Lafayette Avenue has been christened “Indulge” for the express purpose of selling the house for a cool $2,325,000. The house, which was purchased in 2004 for $998,000, has undergone an extensiveand…

This may be a first: Creating a name for the purpose of marketing a one-family brownstone! In this case, the four-story brownstone at 274 Lafayette Avenue has been christened “Indulge” for the express purpose of selling the house for a cool $2,325,000. The house, which was purchased in 2004 for $998,000, has undergone an extensiveand quite attractiverenovation in the meantime. It’s also got some direct competition up the road at 298 Lafayette Avenue where another recently renovated four-story brownstone is on the market for $1,995,000.
274 Lafayette Avenue [Corcoran] GMAP P*Shark
Why you people even indulge Dave is beyond me.
no floorplan = lame
Where to begin 3:36?….First you have contradicted yourself a few times but to start with, here are the state rates (before we get into the NYC issue)
NJ 6.37% > $75,000
8.97% > $500,000
NY 6.85% > $20,000
So your “mere fraction” assessment is way off.
As far as my travel schedule, its quite extensive, including overseas. It does not however include a lot of NJ time and for good reason. Read the post on the Forum about people thinking of moving to “the burbs” and all the comments about bad NJ experiences.
“State income taxes in NJ are a mere fraction of NYS taxes.”
But NJ is broke so they have to go up.
so move to jersey and stay off brownstoner
house moniker + all caps + red font = CLASSY
so move to jersey and stay off brownstoner
tinarina,
I have never set foot in the neighborhood, and God willing I will never need to.
I don’t go over there, sorry.
State income taxes in NJ are a mere fraction of NYS taxes. We live in a very high-tax state. Even other high tax states like NJ and Conn. seem like tax havens by comparison. Don’t kid yourself. Also NJ residents who work in NY no longer have to pay the “communter tax” so no, daveinbed, the typical NJ resident does not have to pay anywhere near the taxes a NY resident pays. Plus if the NJ resident has two or three kids they all go to good public school for free. Plus car insurance is a fraction of what it is in Brooklyn. I agree with the other poster that you should travel more.