houseWindsor Terrace
82 Prospect Park SW
Townsley & Gay
Sunday 2:30-4:30pm
$1,899,000 &nbsp $1,799,000
GMAP &nbsp &nbsp &nbsp ARCHIVE

houseClinton Hill
30 Cambridge Place
Corcoran
Sunday 12:30-2:30pm
$1,650,000 &nbsp $1,545,000
GMAP &nbsp &nbsp &nbsp ARCHIVE

houseProspect Heights
415 Sterling Place
Prudential/Brooklyn Props
Sunday 2:30-4pm
$1,600,000 &nbsp $1,500,000
GMAP &nbsp &nbsp &nbsp ARCHIVE

houseFort Greene
730 Fulton Street
Citi Habitats
Sunday 12-2pm
$1,500,000 &nbsp $1,400,000
GMAP &nbsp &nbsp &nbsp ARCHIVE


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

  1. I still think that Cambridge Place is still a bit overpriced for the ‘hood. It does have a beautiful rental apartment on the garden level.

    The fulton street house is way overpriced. Of course, I’m not interested in new construction, so I’m biased.

    When looking at houses, I’m still shocked how little brokers know about other properties on the market from their own agency. I don’t know if they are feigning ignorance or whether it’s a fact. I asked about the difference between the two houses Corcoran has on Cambridge and a realtor couldn’t tell me.

    Finally, while I was in one open house over the weekend, I was taking a lot of notes. (Otherwise, the houses blend in my head and I can’t remember the different flooring in each house.) A realtor asked me if I had a blog and then told me how much she does not like bloggers. Free speech hurts!

  2. on a rollercoaster, there is an exquisite moment
    after youve slowly slowly gone click click click
    click and reached the top of that first huge run down before acceleration and

    whooooooooooooooosh…

    and yeah its only a moment
    but it feels much longer
    for those who fear the ride
    the most the ride
    down….

  3. Please note on 30 Cambridge that it is now being offered by Corcoran and no longer by Warburg. They had the price at $1,650,000 originally at $1,900,000. Corcoran was not the “bad guy” this time and has priced it reasonably.

  4. realtor here. still doing lots of deals. people who aren’t ready to buy, or who bought a while back and can’t believe today’s numbers, loving this website seem to enjoy taking down the prices of homes for sport. i don’t get it. all it takes is one buyer who falls in love with one home to make a deal. and all we do is bring those two parties together. sorry if that’s not working for you all. but it’s sometimes as much of a process for sellers as it is for buyers when they are figuring out when/whether to sell their houses. and that’s okay i think and is a sign of a healthy market. why should every house fly off the shelf in no time flat? buying shoes takes longer than that.

  5. This is definately not a “bubble”. A bubble would be where recent buyers suddenly found themselves way underwater on their purchases.

    This is simply a realignment of expectations on the part of overly optimistic sellers and flippers. It’s shifting to more of a buyers market. That in and of itself is not a bubble.

    People have been asking ludicrous prices for crap properties just to see if there is somebody dumb enough to pay them.

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