Buy a Manhattan townhouse

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Downtown | Brooklyn | Condo

$1,274,900

112 Fleet Place

2Beds
2Baths
1,000Sq.ft.

East Harlem | Manhattan | Coop

$250,000

302 E 119th Street

1Beds
1Baths

Upper East Side | Manhattan | Coop

$8,900,000

112 E 74TH Street

5Beds
4Baths
3,000Sq.ft.

Downtown | Manhattan | Condo

$6,995,000

50 W 30TH Street

3Beds
3Baths
2,190Sq.ft.

Upper East Side | Manhattan | Coop

$825,000

525 E 89th Street

2Beds
1Baths
1,000Sq.ft.

Upper West Side | Manhattan | Coop

$1,650,000

32 W 82ND Street

2Beds
2Baths

Financial District | Manhattan | Condo

$1,300,000

15 William Street

1Beds
1Baths
1,065Sq.ft.

Brooklyn Heights | Brooklyn | Coop

$699,000

96 SCHERMERHORN Street

1Beds
1Baths

Carroll Gardens | Brooklyn | Condo

$885,000

156 SACKETT Street

2Beds
1Baths
800Sq.ft.

Hamilton Heights | Manhattan | Coop

$600,000

435 Convent Avenue

2Beds
1Baths

Chelsea | Manhattan | Condo

$1,375,000

540 W 28TH Street

1Beds
1Baths
776Sq.ft.

Soho | Manhattan | Condo

$1,250,000

246 Spring Street

1Beds
1Baths
754Sq.ft.
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Historic Manhattan Townhouses

Townhouses exist in all five boroughs, but Manhattan has some of the finest examples in neighborhoods like the West Village, Greenwich Village, Soho, Chelsea, Flatiron, and Gramercy. They represent a unique housing option in New York City—the rare private home. The term townhouse comes from England where Londoner’s describing a place that a person of above average means kept “in town”, while their primary residence was in the country. It is used today to describe a wide array of row-houses, but no longer just as second homes for the wealthy.

Manhattan townhouses date back as far to the Civil War era or even earlier. They are frequently referred to as Brownstones when surfaced with the familiar reddish-brown finish that resembles the soft sandstone of the same name. This very soft Brownstone, quarried in upstate New York and transported by barge down the Hudson, turned out to not be a great building material. It was prone to spalling and relatively rapid deterioration. Many today are replaced with tinted stuccos, while others may be faced with limestone or simple brick. Although rare, some wood frame buildings still exist, and modern architectural expressions of the townhouse are being built where zoning and their scale makes sense.

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Townhouses offer the charm and human scale of a different era—with the advantages of greater privacy, larger proportions, gardens, and backyards. They comprise some of the most sought-after luxury homes in the New York City market, even more so today as buyers seek the advantages of all they have to offer.

Peter is a specialist in helping our clients sell and acquire these special homes, advising clients on the value added and the unique requirements of dealing with properties in Landmarked Historic Districts, which often preserve quality of life in balance with restrictions on property use and modification. That experience is invaluable to them.

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