With Easter weekend upon us, there are slim pickings in the open house department. Here are three we were able to dig up. Feel free to list any more you can find in the comments.

houseCarroll Gardens
150 Summit Street
Corcoran
Saturday 2:30-4
$1,475,000
GMAP P*Shark

houseSouth Midwood
678 East 22nd Street
Brooklyn Properties
Saturday 2:30-4
$1,199,000
GMAP P*Shark

housePark Slope
289 14th Street
Some Dude Named Richard
Saturday 1-3:30
$985,000
GMAP P*Shark


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

  1. It doesn’t “suck” to be motivated to sell one’s apartment, Park Slope Renter.

    These people suck:
    * mean people
    * George W. Bush
    * toxic bosses
    * noisy neighbors

    See my point? Change your standards for what is bad behavior. Because if seeing someone simply trying to sell their apartment offends you that much, you’ve lived a pretty sheltered life!

  2. $800 per sq foot is high. We sold our very well-located, prime Park Slope co-op this past Fall for $600 per sq foot. But other factors play a big role not just square footage. Like obviously a well maintained, nicer building will be priced higher for its apartments than some run-down thing that might be for sale on the same block. And with co-ops and condos, services and amenities make a big difference in price. Like whether the laundry is inside the apartment or in the basement. Or if there is no laundry at all in the building. Also the maintenance fee per month affects sale price, and whether there is a mortgage on a co-op building, or its mortgage is paid off. All kinds of things that make comparisions to pricing houses totally different from pricing apartments.

  3. Is it just me, or does Dave seem to be posting as lots of different people, peppering his posts with some neutral stuff to try and hide the fact. Maybe I’m paranoid and there’s no one on the grassy knoll this time, but imho, Dave sucks.

  4. Thank you Dave for responding to Brownstoner’s request to list more open houses in the comments. I’m sorry some people are giving you a hard time. The apartment looks fine; however, if it is only 500 sq feet, isn’t $800/psf high? The Summit St. house is only $600/psf, if you don’t include the rent control tenant floor (and even less if you do). Are co-ops alot more expensive per foot than brownstones?

  5. i saw dave’s apartment as well (i’m not in the market, was there with a friend). it seems to be a very friendly, well-maintained co-op in a cool location. the apartment gets great light, which to me is a #1 priorty.

    sometimes this board gets to snooty for its own good.

  6. SMidwood looks cute, but seems priced way too high given its small size (a bit over 2000′) and location–far from the trains and in a transitioning neighborhood. Also, I’ve heard that the area has experienced a recent increase in crime and that it varies block by block in safety and appeal.

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