
"Everyone thought it was super cool," Bartolucci said."
""Public Enemy No. 1.""
""Coupled with the fact that this specific lot was unusually deep, at 113 feet deep,""
The five-story Park Slope townhouse that once housed Al Capone sold for $5.82 million after listing at $6.25 million. Capone lived at 38 Garfield Place as a child before moving to Chicago and rising to infamy as "Public Enemy No. 1." The property underwent a ground-up renovation that kept the historic brick facade while gutting and refitting interiors with Italian marble, bespoke millwork, Carrara fish-scale tiles, and Calcutta Oro countertops. The expanded 4,000+ square-foot home spans five stories with four bedrooms, five full baths, three powder rooms, a deep 113-foot lot, and dramatic garden-level double-height ceilings.
Read at New York Post
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