The Insider: Park Slope Homeowners Serve as Own Contractors, Designers in Row House Expansion
When they first moved in to their 18-foot-wide Park Slope row house, Peter and Lovleen Cavanagh gave...
When they first moved in to their 18-foot-wide Park Slope row house, Peter and Lovleen Cavanagh gave...
It's not what you'd expect to find behind the painted shingles of an 1860s wood-frame house with a p...
After 12 years of working for a large commercial real estate company in Europe, Maya Sheehan and her...
The transformation of this 1,400-square-foot loft in a 1980s factory conversion into a bespoke famil...
The late-19th-century bay-windowed brownstone on a landmark block had seen better days, for sure. St...
Don't be fooled by what looks like a century-old brick townhouse in a row of the same. Only the fron...
A late-19th-century wood-frame house is a rarity in New York City these days, but they do exist. In ...
The befores and afters say it all. From a dreary, dated duplex with an awkward spiral stair, Brookly...
When a row house is only 12-and-a-half feet wide, most design decisions revolve around the limitatio...
Have you ever wondered why Ditmas Park's coolest places (Sycamore, a hybrid flower shop/whiskey bar;...