Open House Picks
Brooklyn Heights 33 Middagh Street Adam Tibbs Group Sunday 12-2 $2,025,000 GMAP P*Shark Park Slope 45 Park Place Prudential Douglas Elliman Sunday 12-2pm $1,800,000 GMAP P*Shark Windsor Terrace 452 Prospect Avenue Heights Berkeley Sunday 11:30-4pm $1,275,000 GMAP P*Shark Clinton Hill 143 Vanderbilt Avenue Century 21 Benjamin Sunday 12-2pm $975,000 GMAP P*Shark

Brooklyn Heights
33 Middagh Street
Adam Tibbs Group
Sunday 12-2
$2,025,000
GMAP P*Shark
Park Slope
45 Park Place
Prudential Douglas Elliman
Sunday 12-2pm
$1,800,000
GMAP P*Shark
Windsor Terrace
452 Prospect Avenue
Heights Berkeley
Sunday 11:30-4pm
$1,275,000
GMAP P*Shark
Clinton Hill
143 Vanderbilt Avenue
Century 21 Benjamin
Sunday 12-2pm
$975,000
GMAP P*Shark
I agree that the Tibbs site is excellent… must be expensive to maintain, hence all of the properties being over-priced.
The Adam Tibbs Group web site rocks. It’s very artsy, but still easy to navigate, and the photos of all the properties are well done.
Just the thing a “boutique” Real Estate agency should have for their website.
Vanderbilt house should be priced closer to $700k. It’s a total gutt rehab and only 2000sq feet. Sure, the floor boards can be saved, but what else?
Only a professional will buy that place or a really naive amature.
I did love the Middagh St. house but not the stairwell. It’s beautifully done but I would never do that in a historic house. I did like the kitchen-but I wish it were closer to the period of the house too. I hadn’t realized it was so tiny either.
I hated the kitchen of the Park SLope house and I wish they had left some wall to separate the foyer from the living room on the parlor floor.
Not like I can afford any of them.Oh well…it’s nice to dream anyway.
CHP! You’re back?!?! Bravo! 🙂
The Vanderbilt house could be fixed up, with some prudent design and a big pile o’ money. It seems to suffer from someone trying to make it something it is not – a rustic English cottage. The wide plank floors are its best feature. That poor kitchen! Waaaayyyyyy too much money, however.
With this and the Middagh St. house, nice to see what for New York City is ancient housing – late 1700’s, early 1800’s.
The Prospect Avenue house looks so cute . . . on the inside. You have to wonder why there are no photos of the outside of the house. And — no backyard! And Prospect Avenue is so ugly.
Yente- my feeling is the owner, not the agent took those pictures (I see definite similarities to my own camera work). It looks like one of those awful 50’s-60’s rehabs. What is up with the knotty pine trim?
On the prospect Ave. house I can’t tell from the photos if it’s wider than it looks (the garden looks like a hallway!).But the kitchen has a lot of charm.
Are any of these places near Prospect Lefferts Gardens? I don\’t want to get myself killed.