Homes for Sale in Brooklyn and Manhattan
Brooklyn | 336 Saint Mark’s Avenue, No. 3A
Prospect Heights Condo
$2.3 million
A three-bedroom, two-and-a-half-bath, 1,500-square-foot apartment with a combined living and dining room that has a balcony; a kitchen with a dishwasher and breakfast bar; a primary suite with a walk-in closet and balcony; and a laundry room, on the third floor of a four-story, non-doorman elevator building with a roof deck and parking garage. Nicholas Athanail, Corcoran Group, 917-686-4934; corcoran.com
Costs
Common charges: $1,352 a month
Taxes: $990 a month
Pros
The apartment feels bright, stylish and comfortable, and it comes with a deeded indoor parking space, though monthly fees apply.
Cons
None of the bathrooms have windows.
Manhattan | 507 East 12th Street, No. 1B
East Village Co-op
$500,000
A one-bedroom, one-bath, 550-square-foot prewar apartment with a combined living and dining room, a kitchen with stainless steel appliances and a dishwasher, a bedroom with French doors, and hardwood floors, on the ground floor of a five-story non-doorman building with 13 units and a shared courtyard. Christian Bindel, Sotheby’s International Realty, 510-304-4009; sothebysrealty.com
Maintenance
$1,159 a month
Pros
The storage space is generous for an apartment of its size and includes large closets in the living room.
Cons
The apartment is dim. A dining table would need to be small to fit.
Manhattan | 274 Water Street, No. 1F
South Street Seaport Co-op
$1.495 million
A 900-square-foot prewar studio apartment with an open floor plan, a sleeping area set apart with a curtain, a kitchen with stainless steel appliances and a dishwasher, a bathroom with subway-tile walls, a washer and dryer, original columns, 12-foot ceilings and painted-brick walls, in a non-doorman walk-up building on a Belgian-block-lined street near the Brooklyn Bridge. Steve Gold, 212-508-7193, William McLarnon, 609-204-8853, Corcoran Group; corcoran.com
Maintenance
$1,595 a month
Pros
The apartment’s raw, industrial touches seem of a piece with the neighborhood, a historic working-waterfront district. The unit comes with a basement storage area.
Cons
The apartment, a former storefront, has windows and a glassed door looking directly out onto Water Street, which may be unnerving to those accustomed to more private settings.
Given the fast pace of the current market, some properties may no longer be available at the time of publication.
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