Top 10 Brooklyn Listings: A Beverley Square West Standalone
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Top 10 Brooklyn Listings: A Beverley Square West Standalone
"Listings in Park Slope were popular with readers again this week. The least expensive home on the list is a Park Slope rental at $4,500 a month and the most expensive is a Park Slope brownstone at $4.495 million. Which would you choose? 10. In Park Slope, this 1880s brownstone two-family comes with a pier mirror, moldings, and mantels. 9. This renovated 1880s row house in the Prospect Heights Historic District is a two-family set up with two duplex units. 8. In Sunset Park, this brownstone has wood floors, mantels, and wall moldings. 7. A single-family Edwardian, 34 Waldorf Court combines original details with a sprinkling of updates, some more recent than others. 6. With intact original details and updates including a dishwasher, this Park Slope floor-through on the top floor has two bedrooms and a flexible layout."
"5. This Park Slope brownstone has been updated over the centuries, but still has some wood floors, mantels, a substantial newel post, and a stair niche. 4. This Bay Ridge house has wood floors, stained glass, and a renovated kitchen. 3. In Windsor Terrace, this late 19th century semi-detached single-family row house with a porch is 16.67 feet wide and hasn't changed hands in decades. 2. This early 20th century semi-detached house in East Flatbush is a single-family with a sunroom, fireplace, and garage. 1. A single-family standalone house in Beverley Square West has wood floors, stained glass, and plenty of bedroom space."
Park Slope listings account for several of the most popular Brooklyn homes, spanning an affordable $4,500/month rental to a $4.495 million brownstone. The roundup includes 1880s two-family brownstones and renovated row houses in Prospect Heights, brownstones in Sunset Park, a single-family Edwardian at 34 Waldorf Court, and a Park Slope floor-through with original details and modern updates. Additional highlights feature a Bay Ridge house with stained glass, a Windsor Terrace late-19th-century single-family row house, an East Flatbush semi-detached with sunroom and garage, and a Beverley Square West standalone with ample bedrooms and period details.
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