Just Sold in Brooklyn
BROOKLYN HEIGHTS $850,000 41 Pierrepont Street Prewar two-bedroom, one-bath floor-through co-op, 1,400 square feet, with two wood-burning fireplaces, washer/dryer, eat-in kitchen, original details, built-in bookcases, parquet floors, renovated bath, window AC and N/S exposures. Maintenance $1,016, 70 percent tax-deductible. Asking price $825,000, on market three weeks. Broker: Leslie Marshall, The Corcoran Group PROSPECT HEIGHTS $450,000…
BROOKLYN HEIGHTS $850,000
41 Pierrepont Street
Prewar two-bedroom, one-bath floor-through co-op, 1,400 square feet, with two wood-burning fireplaces, washer/dryer, eat-in kitchen, original details, built-in bookcases, parquet floors, renovated bath, window AC and N/S exposures. Maintenance $1,016, 70 percent tax-deductible. Asking price $825,000, on market three weeks. Broker: Leslie Marshall, The Corcoran Group
PROSPECT HEIGHTS $450,000
4 Butler Place
One-bedroom, one-bath condo, 690 square feet, with renovated kitchen and bath overlooking courtyard and fountain; Butler Plaza features doorman, roof deck, gym and storage. Common charges $309, taxes $95. Asking price $425,000, on market three weeks. Brokers Mitch Wexler and Jorge Murillo, The Corcoran Group
Just Sold! [NY Post]
Isn’t it also true that smaller places usually go for a bit more per sq. ft?
41 Pierrepont St *is* on a great block, but it was also a 4+ walk-up so that’s why the price was lower. And still sold in a bidding war.
Also, it’s in a good school district which also matters.
yes, they seem right to me. Sure there are some great blocks in brooklyn heights that will continue to command a big premium but many parts of it offer little more than close proximity to manhattan.
Now that people are interested in living in brooklyn and taking advantage of what brooklyn has to offer, the premium will not be placed only on how short your commute is but what your neighborhood is like.
Personally, I would rather live on butler place, one block to the park, botanic gardens, farmer’s market, museum, etc. and a close walk to restaurants, shopping, nightlife, etc. along Vanderbuilt, Flatbush, 7th ave and 5th ave then to be in brooklyn heights and all its mediocrity in these areas.
So, Brooklyn Heights at a little more than $600 per square foot, and Prospect Heights around $650. Do these numbers seem about right to people?
as if Leslie Marshall needs any more money.