While most of the 190 or so units at One Hanson Place have sold by now, there are still a few left, and the developers have decided they’d rather earn some income on them than have them just sit empty. So as of Friday, there are now 19 apartments available for rent from the developer through Stribling, ranging from $3,400 to $4,900 a month. (Three other units have been for rent by owner since the fall.)


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

  1. ” great another wanna be what.

    ***your personality is already taken*** ”

    That’s right. D-ridin’ The What all day, everyday. He is the prophet.

    “Novo…just about entirely sold out”

    I believe you.

    ***Bid half off peak comps***

  2. BrooklynLove,

    I said “the game as we used to know it is over.”

    Of course Wall Street still provides its fundamental functions, but bankers and traders will make much less than they used to for YEARS to come.

    Profits will have to earned the old fashioned way, not created out of thin air with the wave of a hand over a phony financial statement.

  3. At $3K month, those units get kind of tempting actually. I agree it’s a nicer building than most new construction, although the floor plans I’ve seen seriously suffer from too much space devoted to bathrooms.

  4. Not to mention, I’m sure if I walked into One Hanson Place, I could walk out with a signed lease on one of those two bedroom apartments for at minimum $500/mo less than ask.

    There are no more new Wall Street jobs, Babs.

    The game as we used to know it is OVER.

  5. Babs,

    You’re totally wrong.

    Brooklyn and Manhattan rents are both dropping because of all the Wall Street layoffs and the crappy economy.

    Where in the world are you getting your information?

    Possibly Brooklyn Heights is holding up better than the Upper East Side, but overall Manhattan rents are still higher than Brooklyn’s.

    I know first hand what landlords are charging in Brooklyn right now, and it’s much less than they were charging a year ago! For you to claim otherwise is absurd.

    Not to mention, very very few people are looking to move to either Manhattan or Brooklyn right now, since no one is hiring.

    I love Prospect Park too, but if you’re alluding that it’s somehow superior to Central Park, you’ve been smoking some egregiously high quality skunk!