Skip to main content
rented
WEB ID: 6061690

44 South Oxford Street, 10 Fort Greene, Brooklyn, NY 11217

Fort Greene, Brooklyn, NY 11217

rented | Apartment Building | Built in 1930

1 bed
1 bath
$2,800
  • No Fee

This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate. Click on image or "Expand" button to open the fullscreen carousel.

rented
WEB ID: 6061690

44 South Oxford Street, 10 Fort Greene, Brooklyn, NY 11217

Fort Greene, Brooklyn, NY 11217

rented | Apartment Building | Built in 1930

1 bed
1 bath
$2,800
  • No Fee

The Details

About 44 South Oxford Street, 10, Fort Greene, Brooklyn, NY 11217

DEKALB AVENUE and LAFAYETTE AVENUE
Welcome to 44 South Oxford St Fully renovated 5th floor (walkup) apartment. *Virtual video tours available* This is a beautiful modern one bedroom with exposed brick walls and dark hardwood flooring, offering an abundance of charm as well as a myriad of prewar-style detail and design. Tenants will enjoy the sleek new kitchen with high-end stainless steel appliances and a beautiful modern bathroom with chic til...
Listing Courtesy of Corcoran, Levi Epstein, (803) 445-9686, RLS data displayed by Corcoran Group
Corcoran logo

key features

  • Open kitchen
  • Listing agents

    Interested? Let’s talk.

    How should we connect with you?

    Fort Greene

    Historically one of Brooklyn’s most elegant neighborhoods, Fort Greene has long contended for the distinction of the borough’s most desirable address. Its stately brownstones are coveted and well-preserved, appearing virtually unaltered from how they were developed in the mid-1800s. Those inhabit the area’s Historic District, while, around the edges, luxury developments have risen. Smack dab in the middle of Fort Greene lies Fort Greene Park, the hilly green heart around which the neighborhood revolves. Formerly the site of an actual Revolutionary War fort, it was in the 1840s when then-newspaper editor Walt Whitman called for the area to be reclaimed and turned into public space. Opened initially as Washington Park, it was redesigned in 1867 by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux — who had already developed Central Park and would go on to do Prospect Park — and given its current name.

    All information furnished regarding property for sale, rental or financing is from sources deemed reliable, but no warranty or representation is made as to the accuracy thereof and same is submitted subject to errors, omissions, change of price, rental or other conditions, prior sale, lease or financing or withdrawal without notice. All dimensions are approximate. For exact dimensions, you must hire your own architect or engineer. Images may be digitally enhanced photos, virtually staged photos, artists' renderings of future conditions, or otherwise modified, and therefore may not necessarily reflect actual site conditions. Accordingly, interested parties must confirm actual site conditions for themselves, in person.