Exclusive | Rare Brooklyn TownHouse on Cobert Hidden Street with Suburban Feel Hits for $ 1.75m

Located in a corner of Flatbush, Brooklyn is a rare list that could be confused with suburbs.

The house of $ 1.75 million is found in Albemarle Terrace, a serene street near Prospect Park.

With her neighbor, Kenmore Terrace, the sack unevenness is the little known historical district of the Albemarle-Kenmore terraces.

The Hoter Townardome (Center) is among those praised by its fifth neo-federal facade. Courtesy Katherine Marks
Albemarle Terrace seen from the street 21 of the East. Courtesy Katherine Marks
The interiors of the four bedroom house include hard wooden floors and crown moldings. Courtesy Katherine Marks

The 32 red brick houses in the district date back to 1916.

The quiet community, which is accessed from the 21st of Est street, is shaded under a ripe pine treacenous. The listings are understandably rare.

The picturesque four -bed residence, which is offered, is highlighted, as it is among the “smaller and nasty houses with bedrooms”, praised by historians and conservationists of the book’s architecture “Bricks & Brownstone: The New York Row House”.

The authors called Albemarle Terrace as “the most completed neo-federal houses in the city”, and greeted the shortest houses that represent “perfect books in the history of the New York row building”.

The living room, almost staged with furniture, includes a large window on the bay and a fireplace. Courtesy Katherine Marks
The kitchen on black and white paintings. Courtesy Katherine Marks
The main bedroom connects to the sun room. Courtesy Katherine Marks
The large sunshine has two walls of windows. Courtesy Katherine Marks
The complex tough wooden lands of the house extend to the rooms. Courtesy Katherine Marks
A bath includes an independent bathtub. Courtesy Katherine Marks

This $ 1.75 million house covers three floors. Its interiors have hard wooden floors, a wooden fireplace and a corner sun. A large basement includes a laundry room and access to the backyard.

Albemarle Terrace was built by the popular Slee & Bryson firm, based in Brooklyn, between 1916 and 1917: red bricks, burnt bricks, stone lintels, slate ceilings and bedrooms among its definitive characteristics.

The rhythm of life in Albemarle Terrace has changed little in the last 100 years. A 1978 report from the Landmarks preservation commission described the community’s “quiet atmosphere”, which offers “refreshing contrast with crowds, traffic and noise at the nearby intersection of church avenues and Flatbush”.

Almost 50 years later, the reputation of closed tranquility is still true.

The Gabe Leibowitz list of Douglas Elliman described Albemarle Terrace as an idyllic community, with neighbors often sitting outside and children.

“Every time I have been there, I have seen children playing on the street,” Leibowitz said in The Post, describing the prisoner’s imprisonment as “a very suburban advantage.”

The courtyard of leafy includes a stone terrace. Courtesy Katherine Marks

Leibowitz said that the listings along the Albemarle terrace are especially rare. Noticed only a good handful of sales for the past 15 years.

The area has appeared as a regular shooting location for HBO’s “Empire Boardwalk” and served as Georgetown Stand-in in “The Americans” of FX, according to Streeteasy.

Two other dollars listings in the historic district, both bedrooms, are pending sales.

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Image Source : nypost.com

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