This lovely two-bedroom apartment has a thoughtful layout with large bedrooms and spacious living space. The kitchen includes a large black granite countertop, in-sink garbage disposal, and GE appliances. The rest of the apartment features hardwood solid red oak floors, solar shades in the living room, blackout shades in the bedrooms, LED track lighting throughout, and a walk-in closet. Laundry rooms are on each floor of the building.
Located at the crossroads of three historic neighborhoods, Brooklyn Heights, Cobble Hill, and Downtown Brooklyn, the building sets the standard for turn-key living with some of the most generous amenities anywhere. To start. A 24-hour concierge, underground parking and a 40,000-square-foot YMCA fitness center. The 3rd Floor has been newly redesigned with a beautiful courtyard by James Corner Field Operations, the same designers of the High Line public space in Manhattan. Featuring creative and highly stylized outdoor leisure areas for residents to lounge, eat and play, embodying the meaning of a life lived well.
Outfitted with its very own Dodge YMCA on-premises offering discounts on memberships to residents. The Y has a wide array of fitness classes, swimming pools, basketball courts, indoor track and more. We also partnered with Equinox Brooklyn Heights just a few short blocks away to offer discounts to residents.
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Hip yet peaceful, Boerum Hill is a popular neighborhood where families and young professionals go to shop, eat, and live. Surrounded by Cobble Hill, Park Slope, and Fort Greene, this neighborhood is in the heart of the action.
Most of Boerum's colonial life was spent as the farmland and estate of the Boerum family. However, as Brooklyn expanded, the family soon had to sell their property to make homes for people. Row houses replaced the farmland between the 1840's and 70's.
Boerum Hill was largely a working class neighborhood, many people commuting to the industrial neighborhoods of Brooklyn as well as the Navy Yard. Even after the Navy Yard cut jobs and factories closed, the people of the neighborhood were able to stay strong and afford their homes, even through the Great Depression and the recession of the 1970's.
During the 1990's, homes that were formerly boarding houses started being purchased as private property as streets were listed as…
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