houseClinton Hill
128 Clinton Avenue
Aguayo & Huebener
Sunday 1-3pm
$2,100,000
GMAP

housePark Slope
771A Union Street
Gail Morin
Sunday 11-2pm
$1,995,000
GMAP

houseBoerum Hill
355 Warren Street
Prudential Douglas Elliman
Sunday 12-2pm
$1,100,000
GMAP

houseBed Stuy West
300 Greene Avenue
Corcoran
Sunday 12-2pm
$999,000
GMAP

houseCrown Heights
1640 Union Street
Corley Real Estate
Sunday 1-4pm
$745,000
GMAP

houseBed Stuy East
949 Greene Avenue
By Owner
Sunday 1-4pm
$695,000
GMAP


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

  1. Anon 4:41. Clearly you don’t know.
    As stated: history of investment, the corralation btwn median income and housing cost, and services including banks not check cashing.

    Anon 4:49 “Ok, ok, so 3.24 is a fool who knows nothing.” What do you know about real estate investment principles? How easly you dismiss something without reading the full commentary.

  2. “Park Slope very boring and homogenous filled with aging hippies, a yuppie stroller brigade”

    aging hippies = old white people
    yuppie stroller brigade = young white people

    homogenous = too many white people

  3. Ok, ok, so 3.24 is a fool who knows nothing. Let’s just take it easy. People will buy where they feel comfortable and neighborhoods change. Park Slope is nice, but clearly not the be all end all for most people.

  4. “The current high price of the established brownstone neighborhoods has pushed the asking prices for the non established areas to unjustified levels.”

    This is written by someone “just stating facts rather than opinions”?! Who says what’s justified or not? If that’s not an opinion then I don’t know what is.

  5. Fair point clinton hillbilly, but let’s not fan the flames. While Anon 3.24 does not necessarily know Bed Stuy very well, he is just stating facts rather than opinions. Those facts might lead to untrue generalizations about the neighborhood (i.e. that all of it is dangerous and has no amenities). Some parts of Bed Stuy are nicer than others.

  6. Was intrigued by the comment about how PS prices have gradually risen to the $2 mil mark – wasn’t sure how true that really rang – haven’t prices there risen as crazily as everywhere else? Anyway, I found this pretty interesting report from the NYC independent budget office that deals with historic districts in PS, FG, and Stuy Heights. The bottom graphic on page 4 is fascinating, it plots prices per sq ft from 1997 to 2002 in these three districts. (Oh and PS prices HAVE risen like crazy in the last few years!) Wonder what the ’03-’05 would look like.

    http://www.ibo.nyc.ny.us/iboreports/HistoricDistricts03.pdf

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