Aptsandlofts.com is marketing renovated rental units at 346 East 29th Street, an older building in Flatbush. The seven-story build holds 62 unit rental units: studios, one, two and three bedrooms. Prices begin at $1,108 for a studio, $1,292 for a one-bedroom, $1,708 for a two-bedroom, and $2,492 for a three-bedroom. Here’s what the brokers are saying about the actual spaces:

Topped off with amazing finishes, homes include hardwood floors; kitchens with Cherrywood cabinets, stainless steel appliances and granite countertops; sleek bathrooms with oversized showers and glass tile accents; and a formal dining room. Amenities include a state-of-the-art fitness center, sun deck, laundry room and onsite parking.

They are also marketing the neighborhood as “rich with tree-lined streets, Victorian mansions and teeming with a hip, new social scene.” Think the hot rental market will take over Flatbush, too? We hear that during the leasing launch last week, 250 potential renters scheduled appointments for the first day. So far 25 units are spoken for. Update: as of yesterday afternoon, 35 units were spoken for.

346 East 29th Street Listings [aptsandlofts.com]


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  1. but i wonder what happened to all the tenants that lived there before the fire.
    did the rs rc leases just vanish? did any want to come back. did the lower floors allow for the tenants to get their possessions. i felt terrible for all those people that lost their home because of some moron lighting candles next to a bed. who does that??????/

    the apartments look nice though.

  2. this building had a terrible fire last winter because a supposedly high preistest put candels around the bed while some chick paid him 300 for sex.

    the candles caught the bed lines on fire and they couldnt put it out, opened the window and ran into the hallway only to leave the hallway door open the whole building was a blaze in minutes,.
    from the 4th floor to the 6th floor, in minutes.

    see all the you tube videos on this, unbelieveable

  3. Wow. These apartments may very well be the beach head for the influx of another “re-discovered” neighborhood. Apartment buildings like this one were the bulwark of the civil servant (teachers, government workers, etc.) up until the city’s financial crisis in the mid-1970s. Decreased services were a factor in many leaving the neighborhood. Coupled with the renovations at Flatbush Gardens (formerly Vanderveer Estates) I see change coming.