AVAILABLE NOW: Beautiful, bright, renovated 3-bedroom/flex-4 bedroom duplex with in-unit washer and dryer, and access to a private outdoor space in the gorgeous Fort Greene section of Brooklyn -- across the street from the C train at the Lafayette Avenue stop. Among the apartment's features are:
-Hardwood floors throughout the first floor
-Tiled floors on the lower floor
-Exposed bricks throughout
-Full- and Queen-sized bedrooms
-Decorative fireplace on the first floor
-Modern kitchen set up
-Tiled, updated bathroom
Among the building's features are:
-On-call maintenance
-Wired for Spectrum WiFi
-Pets allowed case-by-case
Nearby:
-Cuyler Core Park
-Fort Greene Park
-South Oxford Park
-Brooklyn Academy of Music
-Long Island University - Brooklyn
-Brooklyn Technical High School
-Brooklyn Hospital
-Atlantic Terminal
-Barclays Center
-Apple Store Downtown Brooklyn
-Whole Foods Market
-Trader Joe's
-Junior's Restaurant
-Target
-Alamo Drafthouse Downtown Brooklyn
-DeKalb Market Hall
-Countless other cafes, bars, restaurants, diners, shops, and other hot spots in Fort Greene, Downtown Brooklyn, Brooklyn Navy Yard, Clinton Hill, Prospect Heights, and more!
Transportation:
-C train to Lafayette Avenue or Clinton-Washington Avenues
-G train to Fulton Street or Clinton-Washington Avenues
-2, 3, 4, 5, B, D, N, Q, and R trains to Atlantic Avenue-Barclays Center
-LIRR trains to Atlantic Terminal
Contact Samantha at 929-823-0341 or s.jean-philippe@hlresidential.com for a private showing.
Surrounded by The Brooklyn Navy Yard, Downtown Brooklyn, Prospect Heights, and Clinton Hill, Fort Greene is a hip neighborhood that is great for young professionals and families alike. Rife with historic brownstones, this neighborhood feels like home.
Fort Greene is named for Revolutionary War General Nathanael Greene, who constructed a fort in the area in 1776. After the war, the area was used to house workers of the new Brooklyn Navy Yard, though several small farms were also still present from the original colony.
Slavery was outlawed in New York in 1827, which allowed the black population of Fort Greene to grow as many people moved to the area seeking work in the Navy Yard. The farmers of the area sold their land to this population and they developed the area as a haven for the abolitionist movement, hosting speakers like Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass.
During the 1900's, Fort Greene experienced a cultural boom, opening BAM in 1908…
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