Homes for Sale in Manhattan and Brooklyn
Manhattan | 205 East 78th Street, No. 7T
Lenox Hill Co-op
$750,000
A one-bedroom, one-bath, roughly 752-square-foot apartment that has a galley kitchen, butcher block countertops, a farmhouse sink, a large bedroom, a home office or guest room, a windowed bathroom, built-in shelving and a wood-burning fireplace, on the seventh floor of a 20-story doorman building with a live-in super, porters, shared laundry, a weight limit for dogs, bike storage and basement storage lockers. Jill Preschel, SERHANT., 908-415-5418; serhant.com
Costs
Maintenance: $2,382 a month
Pros
This well-kept apartment has a vintage feel and a working fireplace. The monthly maintenance fee includes electricity. Pieds-à-terre and subletting are permitted.
Cons
The apartment lacks good views and has few windows.
Manhattan | 695 First Avenue, No. 41G
Murray Hill Condo
$2.395 million
A two-bedroom, two-and-a-half-bath, 1,390-square-foot apartment with an open floor plan, a kitchen with a marble waterfall island, vented range and garbage disposal, a primary suite with a marble bathroom and a walk-in closet, a second en suite bedroom, motorized window shades, central air-conditioning and a washer/dryer, on the 41st floor of a 43-story doorman building with a resident manager, porters, a concierge, a pool, a gym, a catering kitchen, a residents’ lounge and basement storage cages. Sabrina Radoncic, Corcoran Sunshine Marketing Group, 212-685-7200; corcoran.com
Costs
Common charges: $2,143 a month
Taxes: $2,332 a month
Pros
Floor-to-ceiling windows offer gorgeous Midtown cityscapes.
Cons
Basement storage cages cost $35,000. There is no private or shared outdoor space.
Brooklyn | 66 Washington Avenue, No. 3
Clinton Hill Loft
$1.925 million
A 1,132-square-foot studio apartment with a breakfast bar, an open floor plan, two sleeping nooks, a bathroom with a double vanity, a skylight, 13-foot ceilings, a vented washer/dryer, mini-split heating and air-conditioning and a basement storage cage, on the top floor of a three-story prewar walk-up with a super and a roof deck. Kelsey Hall and Maeve Crispi, Brown Harris Stevens, 845-826-5876; bhsusa.com
Costs
Common charges: $614 a month
Taxes: $776 a month
Pros
The unit was fully renovated in 2020 and has its own electric water heater.
Cons
It lacks nice views. There’s no bathtub.
Given the fast pace of the current market, some properties may no longer be available at the time of publication.
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