Rental of the Day: 94 Clinton Avenue
If you’re gonna live in a studio, this isn’t a bad way to do it. This space at 94 Clinton Avenue in Clinton Hill boasts over 1,200 square feet of space, although a floor plan would be nice so we could see where the kitchen and separate alcove are situated. Regardless, this is on a…

If you’re gonna live in a studio, this isn’t a bad way to do it. This space at 94 Clinton Avenue in Clinton Hill boasts over 1,200 square feet of space, although a floor plan would be nice so we could see where the kitchen and separate alcove are situated. Regardless, this is on a nice block in a nice building, and some creativity could make it seem much less like a studio and more like a one-bedroom. What about the $2,300 a month rent? Seems reasonable to us.
94 Clinton Ave [Awaye Realty] GMAP P*Shark
At least it is only about a mile to the nearest Manhattan-bound subway
it has no walls and it’s not a loft. it’s a giant studio. who gives a crap that it’s that big! it’s totally unrentable as it is unless people want to put up screens and live like it’s some sort of eurotrash budget hostel.
*rob*
What is going on with real estate in Brooklyn? Are people nuts or is it just this blog? Get a grip on reality.
If you can afford this, rent a studio in Manhattan and avoid the hassle of begging cabbies to take you home late at night for the next four years.
it is not a studio apartment. if you stupid people knew anything –1200 sq ft is larger than most of your 2 bedrooms.
if open floor plan is not your thing, fine.
It may be half a floor but the building is twice as wide.
If it’s really 1200 sf, that’s larger than most floor throughs, which are generally 800 or 900 (and that’s counting the stairs).
$2300 + studio for anything in Brooklyn sounds absurd to me.
quote:
i live on 2 floors in park slope for 2500. 2300 for rent a STUDIO in CLINTON HILL? i dont think so.
you can get a kick ass modern condo studio in prime spots of manhattan for 2300 dollars a month!
*rob*
Seems like commentary on how reasonable the price of a given listing is has grown in direct proportion to the number of real estate ads
This looks like half a floor. I know someone living in a virtually identical building in Park Slope, who pays $2,500 for the full floor, so this rent seems a little high to me.