Brooklyn time capsule house hits market for first time ever


This never-before-listed house is looking for its second-ever owner. 

What’s more, this home deep in residential Brooklyn looks stuck in the 1950s in the darndest way.

The corner property on a tiny, triangle-shaped street just a block from the Marine Park neighborhood’s namesake green space looks like the set of a midcentury sitcom. From the floral wallpaper to the carpeted stairs, pale green kitchen curtains and stone-floored foyer, the four-bedroom spread couldn’t look more nifty. It’s listed with Serhant’s Tricia Lee for $1.22 million and “on the market for the first time ever,” according to the listing

The home has been in the same family its entire existence, and its 82-year-old owner grew up in it, Lee told The Post. 

marine park time capsule
A mod living area.
Greenhouse Photography
marine park time capsule
The home’s lush entrance.
Greenhouse Photography
marine park time capsule
One of the house’s bathrooms.
Greenhouse Photography
marine park time capsule
One of the four bedrooms in the home.
Greenhouse Photography
marine park time capsule
The property has never been on the market.
Greenhouse Photography
marine park time capsule
Due to its unique corner location, the house has three addresses.
Greenhouse Photography
marine park time capsule
There is a nostalgic charm throughout.
Greenhouse Photography
marine park time capsule
Wooden details abound.
Greenhouse Photography
marine park time capsule
The home’s stuck-in-time kitchen.
Greenhouse Photography
marine park time capsule
Adding to the charm, a woodburning fireplace.
Greenhouse Photography

The family has owned the row house since 1940, and the seller’s father — a 1933 Columbia Medical School graduate — ran his medical practice out of its lower level for most of his career.

The property is now configured as a duplex, with the lower-level still laid out for a medical practice.

“Future owners have the flexibility of keeping the office for commercial use, converting it into an income-producing rental unit, or combining it with the duplex to transform the entire property into a grand single-family house,” notes the listing.

“[He] treated anyone who would show up on his doorstep throughout the Polio outbreak,” said Lee.

Due to its unique location on an itty-bitty non-square block within the street grid, the property technically has three addresses: 3001 Ave. S, 1877-1893 Batchelder St. and 1930 Gerritsen Ave. Its corner lot also allows it to be an additional 43 feet in length and almost 26 feet deeper than most of the area homes, according to Lee. 

Original details including crown moldings, arched doorways and custom built-ins remain throughout. There is a red brick facade, a woodburning fireplace in the den and a two-car garage below the family room.



Read More:Brooklyn time capsule house hits market for first time ever

2022-11-10 20:57:00

Get real time updates directly on you device, subscribe now.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More

Get more stuff like this
in your inbox

Subscribe to our mailing list and get interesting stuff and updates to your email inbox.

Thank you for subscribing.

Something went wrong.