CLINTON HILL $357,000
277 Washington Ave.
Prewar one-bedroom, one-bath co-op, 700 square feet, with E/W exposures and street views; Francine Towers building is pet-friendly and features laundry and storage. Maintenance $549.57, 41 percent tax-deductible. Asking price $369,000, on market 54 days. (Broker: Elizabeth Stile, Halstead Property and Barbara Rogers, Citi Habitats)

BROOKLYN HEIGHTS $435,000
96 Schermerhorn St.
Prewar one-bedroom, one-bath corner co-op, 725 square feet, with 10 windows, 12-foot ceilings, maple floors, walk-in closet, dishwasher, through-the-wall A/C and N/E exposures; Tower in the Heights building is pet-friendly and features full-time doorman, elevator, laundry, private storage lockers and bike room. Maintenance $1,032, 52 percent tax-deductible. Asking price $429,000, on market 44 days. (Broker: Michael Rohrer, the Corcoran Group)

DUMBO $385,000
100 Jay St.
Studio condo, 585 square feet, with hardwood floors and granite kitchens with high-end appliances; J Condos building features 24-hour doorman, elevator, garage, storage and laundry. Asking price $385,000, on market one day. (Broker: Ida Rae, Nest Seekers)

PARK SLOPE $785,000
281A 19th Street
2-family, 2-story prewar woodframe house; 1 bedroom, 1 bath, h/w floors in each unit; English basement, 18-by-100-ft. lot; taxes $1,502; listed at $779,000 (multiple bids). (Broker: Betancourt & Associates)

CARROLL GARDENS
81A Third Place
Legal 2-family, 2-story brownstone being used as a 1-family; original moldings and detail; 2nd kitchen on top floor, 17-by-100-ft. lot; taxes $2,138; listed at $1,265,500. (Broker: Corcoran)

Just Sold! [NY Post – Items 1 to 3]
Residential Sales [NY Times – Items 4 and 5]


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

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  1. I guess the J Condos are there because Nest Seekers submitted the sale to the Post, which somehow found it worthy of including. Good publicity for Nest Seekers, but, yeah, theoretically this can’t be a closed sale — they aren’t even finished yet!

  2. BTW, the BH coop had multiple bids too — including a higher one. That price is very good for that apt. We are seeing large 1 bedroom coops still getting a premium — comapred with 2 bedrooms in a lot of the new buildings that are only 100 sq ft larger!

  3. Tim, true, but we have to assume that those stats are always less than rigorous. So these numbers are still useful to track trends over time — i.e., in comparison with earlier months when the asking price and time on market were probably also monkeyed with.

  4. Also, the way the “asking price” and “time on market” is calculated isn’t rigorous. I’m pretty sure I remember which propeery 81A 3rd Pl. was, and it started at $1.6M and was on the market for several months.

  5. PS, only one property had multiple bids. That makes me feel bad for the person who paid above ask yet had the only bid — they bid above asking because they thought they had to in order to get the place.

  6. The above asking listings have nothing to do with the market picking up now – those properties were likely sold 2 mos. ago. You’ll have to wait another few months to see what’s going on now.

    Besides, Brooklyn is still “affordable” compared to Manhattan – it hasn’t slowed in the same way and will follow behind Manhattan if it does.

  7. Anybody know anything about the J Condos? How are the finshes, etc.? I’m told you can put down your 10% now and then flip your contract before even closing. Sounds pretty shady to me — any thoughts? My boss is convinced this is the best deal on earth but I’m not sure…