Open House Picks
Park Slope 475 4th Street Brooklyn Bridge Realty Sunday 12-3 $2,990,000 GMAP P*Shark Crown Heights 859 St. Marks Avenue MMM Management Sunday 12-1:30 $1,500,000 GMAP P*Shark Crown Heights 1265 Dean Street Corcoran Sunday 2-3:30 $1,100,000 GMAP P*Shark Bedford Stuyvesant 471 Decatur Street Location Location Location Sunday 12-2 $895,000 GMAP P*Shark

Park Slope
475 4th Street
Brooklyn Bridge Realty
Sunday 12-3
$2,990,000
GMAP P*Shark
Crown Heights
859 St. Marks Avenue
MMM Management
Sunday 12-1:30
$1,500,000
GMAP P*Shark
Crown Heights
1265 Dean Street
Corcoran
Sunday 2-3:30
$1,100,000
GMAP P*Shark
Bedford Stuyvesant
471 Decatur Street
Location Location Location
Sunday 12-2
$895,000
GMAP P*Shark
just because you work on wall street doesn’t mean you are republican. in fact, at both companies i have worked for (a broker and a hedge fund), most people are democrats. that is just an old stereotype. btw, i work on wall st., rent in the north slope and plan to buy here when i get a down payment saved up (and once prices mean revert). no rush though and i don’t need any broker follow-ups about why i should buy now. i’ve heard it all before. closing costs alone on a new condo which is likely to drop by 20% in the next year would cover my rent for two years.
3:17
Take the word “area” and assign a numerical value to each of its letters based on their position in the alphabet (1,18,5,1) then add them together, you get 25.
Multiply 25 times three (you used it three times in one sentence), and you get 75.
7+5=12
1+2=3
Spooky, huh?
ooops…i’m 3:13 and my first sentence has the word area in it 3 times.
doh…
I dont think 12:49 was bragging, but rather simply stating an obvious fact about his/her neighborhood. Brooklyn Heights has more Wall Streeters than any other Brooklyn neighborhood, and it’s also the most expensive in the borough (the townhouse market probably double what it is in any other Brooklyn neighborhood). So obviously SOME people do want to live alongside “Republicans”
And I’m not one nor do I live in either neighborhood. Just stating what I thought was an obvious fact.
the area of the north area of park slope is my favorite area in brooklyn. i don’t care if a few of the people work on wall street, arts, media, or trash collectors. the streets are amazingly beautiful, tree-lined, some of the most handsome architecture in the city in my opinion and steps to transportation taking you to manhattan in 15 minutes. all within walking distance to a 100 restaurants, shops, bars, a museum, a greenmarket and one of the nicest urban parks in the country.
whenever i go visit my friend there, i think about how nice it would be to live there.
Ok, then we have no Wall Streeters at all in the North Slope.
These 3 million dollar brownstones are being bought by graphic designers.
Why on earth would that be something to brag about, NorthSloper at 12:49? You’re hilarious. I’ve never heard anybody brag about anything in Brooklyn but the fact we have LESS Wall Streeters here.
And besides sorry you’re actually wrong, the recent stats I was referring to were from Park Slope. AND when we lived in Park Slope (up until a year ago) our entire coop building were people in arts/media.
But if it’s true North Slope is full of bankers you’ve only made me feel incredibly relieved we sold and left when we did. I’d rather not live alongside Republicans, thank you very much.
– ‘bearing arms’ still had a heraldic meaning in the 18th C. ‘a well-regulated militia’ is also pretty clear.
– the Dean St. house could be very nice, I think
Whatever motivated the Supreme Court’s gun decision, one thing it could not have been was “original intention.” The 2d Amendment is so badly drafted, presumably, because it was the product of a committee that wanted it to mean nothing at all: they couldn’t agree on substance but needed to do something.
More importantly, even if the original authors had an intention other than to blather meaninglessly, it couldn’t have included protecting handguns or assault rifles. Neither existed at the time.