Skip to main content

Be@Schermerhorn
189 Schermerhorn Street, Downtown Brooklyn, Brooklyn, NY 11201

Post-war Condo

246 units
This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate.
  • 246 residences
  • 25 stories
  • BUILT 2010

The Details About 189 Schermerhorn Street

Be@Schermerhorn is located at 189 Schermerhorn Street between Smith and Hoyt Street in the heart of Downtown Brooklyn, and within walking distance of all major subway lines. This perfectly situated 246-unit condominium offers studios, one and two bedroom homes, many with spectacular views of Brooklyn and the Manhattan skyline. Choose from the various selections of floor plans to fit your modern...

key features
  • Doorman
  • Guarantors allowed
  • Exercise room
  • Elevators
  • Central laundry room
  • Green House Solarium
  • Media Lounge
  • Onsite Parking Available

Be@schermerhorn Units

UnitsPriceBedsBathsHalf BathsInterior Sq.FtTypeContactFloorplan
PHE$9,000331700Condo
PHB$6,95022965CondoJames CornellAshley BankerLeslie MarshallNick Hovsepian
11C$6,50022910CondoLeslie MarshallAshley BankerNick Hovsepian
21J$5,99522910CondoYan Lee
J19$5,95022Condo
19J$5,90022910CondoYan LeeMaxim Lockhart
22A$4,60012828CondoNatalie PittaJames StubbsEllen Gottlieb
3A$4,50022Condo
PHE
3 BD | 3 BA
$9,000
J19
2 BD | 2 BA
$5,950
3A
2 BD | 2 BA
$4,500

Get to know Downtown Brooklyn

Brooklyn has a skyline, too. It’s a beacon signaling the location of Downtown Brooklyn, a civic and commercial center enduring since before the famed borough was ever a borough. Downtown Brooklyn is best known today as the site of courthouses, municipal buildings, and the like (the imposing Greek Revival-style Borough Hall standing as the most notable). Over time, though, a residential flavor has emerged. Vintage rowhouses are met by condominiums and skyscrapers — each subsequent one taking Brooklyn to literal new heights as the borough’s tallest building. The area’s rise in stature mirrors neighboring Brooklyn Heights, with a 19th-century population boom owed to Robert Fulton’s invention of the steam ferry. People rode across the East River from Manhattan and never looked back — except to enjoy scenic vistas from the nearby waterfront or a perch up on high.

Downtown Brooklyn Neighborhood Guide