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Homes for Sale in Brooklyn and Manhattan

Manhattan |151 East 83rd Street, No. 8B

Upper East Side Co-op

$849,000

A one-bedroom, one-bath, 800-square-foot prewar apartment with a living room that has a fireplace and built-in bookshelves, a dining room currently used as a home office, a windowed galley kitchen with a dishwasher, a windowed bath, and parquet floors, on the eighth floor of an 11-story doorman elevator building with a landscaped courtyard, a basement laundry room and a live-in superintendent. Christine Miller Martin, Compass, 917-453-5152; compass.com

COSTS

Maintenance: $2,050 a month
Special assessment: $70 a month through December 2023

Pros

The bathroom has two doors — one that opens into the bedroom and the other into a hall. The bedroom enjoys southern exposure. The fireplace works.

Cons

The kitchen is tight and seems maxed out in terms of storage possibilities. The bedroom doesn’t have any closets, though the apartment has three.


Brooklyn | 51 Summit Street, No. 1B

Columbia Street Waterfront Condo

$1.9 million

A two-bedroom, two-bath, 1,480-square-foot apartment with a living room with a dining alcove, a kitchen with island seating and quartz counters, a windowless home office, a primary suite with a walk-in closet and sliding doors to a backyard, a laundry room, and a separate next-door storage area, on the ground floor of a nine-unit, non-doorman walk-up complex in an enclave next to Cobble Hill. Amy Morilla, Corcoran Group, 917-439-2128; corcoran.com

Costs

Common charges: $370 a month
Taxes: $321 a month

Pros

The yard, lined with stone and edged with fencing, is larger than what some townhouses have. The brick-faced condo blends in to its neighborhood, unlike some developments. The monthly fees are low.

Cons

The interiors seem dim. Yard access requires going through a bedroom. The nearest subway stop, on Smith Street, is about six blocks away.


Manhattan | 3 Great Jones Street, No. 4

NoHo Co-op

$1.75 million

A two-bedroom, one-bath, 1,300-square-foot apartment with a corner living room that has hardwood floors; a windowed kitchen with a wine refrigerator and dishwasher; a windowless home office with French doors, wallpapered walls and built-in bookshelves; a windowed bath with a penny-tile floor; and a washer and dryer, on the fourth floor of a five-story, non-doorman walk-up building from 1843. Jeremy V. Stein, Sotheby’s International Realty, 917-854-4411; sothebysrealty.com

Maintenance

$2,015 a month

Pros

The apartment has something of a rarity for New York City: a true eat-in kitchen. Because of an alley next door, the home has windows not just in the front and back, but also along a side wall.

Cons

Three flights of stairs may be too many for some. The building is technically reserved for working artists, but the decades-old program that imposes the stipulations is not always enforced.

Given the fast pace of the current market, some properties may no longer be available at the time of publication.

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