Skip to main content
rented
WEB ID: 2022932

495 3RD Street, 3 Park Slope, Brooklyn, NY 11215

Park Slope, Brooklyn, NY 11215

rented | Multi-Family Townhouse

1.5 beds
1 bath
900 Approx. Sqft
$2,700

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: 2022932

495 3RD Street, 3 Park Slope, Brooklyn, NY 11215

Park Slope, Brooklyn, NY 11215

rented | Multi-Family Townhouse

1.5 beds
1 bath
900 Approx. Sqft
$2,700

The Details

About 495 3RD Street, 3, Park Slope, BROOKLYN, NY 11215

6th Avenue & 7th Avenue
Live on one of Park Slope's most desirable blocks! Super sunny top-floor unit in 22' wide brownstone is set up as 1.5 bedroom floor-through. Open bright southern & northern exposures with partial city views. Enjoy prewar details including original ornamental mantles & hardwood floors, all refinished windows, and tin-ceilings. Renovated skylit kitchen features stainless steel Bosch gas range & Amana refrigerator wi...
Listing Courtesy of Corcoran, Christian Powers, (646) 270-5862, RLS data displayed by Corcoran Group
Corcoran logo

key features

  • Dining in living room
  • Dishwasher
  • Excellent light
  • Hardwood floors
  • Modern kitchen
  • Prewar detail
  • Renovated
  • Window A/C
  • Floor-through
  • Open kitchen
  • Partial city view
  • Partial skyline view
  • Listing agent

    Interested? Let’s talk.

    How should we connect with you?

    Park Slope

    Just as Central Park was the catalyst for Manhattan’s building boom, Prospect Park had a similar effect on Brooklyn when it opened in 1867; it just took a bit longer to get going. But by the 1880s and 1890s, Victorian mansions began going up on Prospect Park West — the so-called “Gold Coast” renowned for its park views. The opening of the Brooklyn Bridge in 1883 also hastened development, resulting in the construction of brick and brownstone townhouses. In the mid-20th century, Park Slope was ahead of its time. Those Victorian mansions, divided into apartments in the intervening years, started being restored to single-family homes in the 1960s. That grand 19th-century architecture, plus proximity to the park, drew and continues to draw residents. From long before Brooklyn’s current moment of cool, Park Slope has maintained an allure like nowhere else in the borough.

    Corcoran logo

    about the building

    495 3RD Street

    Multi-Family Townhouse in Park Slope

    6th Avenue & 7th Avenue

    • 3 UNITS
    • 4 STORIES
    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.