Open House Picks: Houses
Carroll Gardens 98 3rd Place Brown Harris Stevens Sunday 2:30-4:30 $2,450,000 GMAP P*Shark Park Slope 360A 5th Street Warren Lewis Sunday 2:30-4:30 $1,875,000 GMAP P*Shark Bedford Stuyvesant 111 Clifton Place Corcoran Sunday 12-1 $1,395,000 GMAP P*Shark Kensington 301 Caton Avenue Brooklyn Properties Sunday 1-3 $889,000 GMAP P*Shark Tune in tomorrow morning for Open House Picks:…
Carroll Gardens
98 3rd Place
Brown Harris Stevens
Sunday 2:30-4:30
$2,450,000
GMAP P*Shark
Park Slope
360A 5th Street
Warren Lewis
Sunday 2:30-4:30
$1,875,000
GMAP P*Shark
Bedford Stuyvesant
111 Clifton Place
Corcoran
Sunday 12-1
$1,395,000
GMAP P*Shark
Kensington
301 Caton Avenue
Brooklyn Properties
Sunday 1-3
$889,000
GMAP P*Shark
Tune in tomorrow morning for Open House Picks: Apartments
Broken record much, 7:15?
I think you need to talk to your therapist about your nasty, bitchy, ignorant ways.
Who’s right?
Considering the Park Slope boosters are not picking on any one neighborhood in its entirety and you are, I’d say YOU are the one with the problemas.
Park Slopers are not the only ones who rolled up their sleeves and got to work. Nice attempt to self-justify and condescend at the same time. Maybe your should talk to your therapist(s) about your inability to accept an opposing point of view or criticism.
You just can’t admit that the world does not revolve around your neighborhood or that the price you paid doesn’t justify what you actually got for the money.
You all deserve each other and your self-important ways. The rest of the borough should be glad that you are too self-obsessed to ruin any other neighborhood.
Park Slope is overpriced.
You’ll have to excuse 6:46.
He/she believes that if a home doesn’t sell in a week, it’s “not moving”
Where is the run up in inventory, 6:46?
I see almost zero studios for sale in all of Park Slope.
I see very few one bedrooms that are not in the Novo or one of the other new condo developments along 4th or in Greenwood Heights.
I see a few 2 bedrooms, very few of which have been on the market more than a month.
And I see handful of townhomes for sale. Most have sold in a month or less barring one I can think of at 52 Berkeley or something that’s been sitting for a while. A couple others I can think of that have sat.
Do you have any perspective of time?
It used to be in the late 90’s there would be 100 townhomes for sale at any given time. Hundreds of 1 and 2 bedrooms.
You really think inventory is not low now in the grand scheme of things, or your memory only began at the start of the housing boom 7 years ago?
5:51…by the way you write, it’s obvious you’ve lived in Brooklyn since 1967. Did you make it past the 5th grade??
My god. Talk about a run on sentence.
Posted by: guest at October 28, 2007 6:23 PM
Thanks for the insight friend, but I passed through Brooklyn Tech on my way to NYU.
So how were the open houses?
Enough with the class and neighborhood pontification.
Back to the current RE: I do think Park Slope is overpriced. 3:58 is wrong. There IS inventory building up and not moving. Prices are dropping- I’ve seen several specific properties drop their prices which would indicate that they were indeed overpriced (although in line with all PS prices). Just b/c there is a buyer or two who is willing to buy at the current prices absolutely does NOT mean that there are enough buyers to move all of the inventory. Prices in PS are already coming down and they will continue to do so a bit. They are just ridiculously high and pricing out the specific demographic that has made the prices run up in the first place (the Manhattanites with a bit of money but not the silver spoon elite).
I’ve heard really wonderful things about ps. 39.
“Also, PS 39 (5th street house zoned for this school) is no PS 321.”
You’re right, 4:42– 39 has a much more ethnically and socio-economically diverse student body and less crowded classroms.