**Contact me for virtual or in person tour! Nolan Dalman Highline Residential**
2 Bed 2 Bath
Corner 2BR home with 2 full baths and North West exposure capturing views of the Empire State Building and gorgeous sunsets. Plenty of storage including a walk-in closet as well as in-home washer / dryer. *Photo may not be of actual unit but are representative of interior finishes.
BUILDING DESCRIPTION:
Designed by Perkins Eastman, with amenities designed by Lemay + Escobar, Brooklyn Crossing offers 51 stories of custom-appointed residences and amenities to create the next chapter in your life story. Studio and 1- to 3-bedroom apartments, with resident amenities designed for being still or being in the center of the action, whenever you choose. Here, space abounds to stretch solo or spin with friends in the expansive fitness center, make it a movie night in the resident Screening Room, or people-watch on the open-air rooftop complete with a Sky Lounge, outdoor pool, and 360-degree views stretching from the Manhattan skyline to Rockaway Beach. Situated in prime Prospect Heights, you're minutes from epic culture and culinary fare in every direction, including historic landmarks like the Brooklyn Academy of Music and dynamic new destinations like Barclays Center. Add to that 10 train lines one block away, and really, you can go anywhere you want from here.
Right above Prospect Park, and sandwiched between Park Slope and Crown Heights, Prospect Heights is home to some of the premiere entertainment in Brooklyn, while also being a peaceful neighborhood full of families and fun times.
Part of the original city of Brooklyn, Prospect Heights was an important part of the agricultural practices and trade routes of the Dutch colonists who controlled the land in the 1600's. After the American Revolution, Brooklyn's population began to grow rapidly, and the land of Prospect Heights was sold to the city in order to build housing.
The original grid for Prospect Heights was drawn in 1833 and constructed in 1834, based largely on how the land had been run by the farmers who settled there. However, Brooklyn decided, as streets were still being constructed, to lay a new grid all together in 1839. A deal was struck to keep the streets already constructed which is why some of the streets in Prospect Heights…
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