University Towers 122 Ashland Place, Downtown Brooklyn, Brooklyn, NY 11201
Post-war Co-op
- 184 residences
- 15 stories
- BUILT 1958
The Details About 122 Ashland Place
University Towers Co-op. This gated property has a 24-hour lobby attendant, two elevators, laundry on premises, community room, package room, fitness center, landscaped gardens, picnic area/BBQ grill, playground. On-site parking is available. Live in one of Brooklyns most sought-after neighborhood: Fort Greene. University Towers sits on 5 acres of beautifully landscaped gardens and trees. Conve...
- Doorman
- Elevators
- Central laundry room
- 24 Hour Lobby Attendant
- Designated Parking On-site
- Video Security Cameras
- Party/meeting room
- 24 hour Laundry Room
University Towers Units
- transaction type
- Sold
- Rented
Units | Price | Beds | Baths | Half Baths | Interior Sq.Ft | Type | Contact | Floorplan |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4M | $3,800 | 2 | 2 | Co-op | Cesar NegronCarolyn Romberg | |||
7L | $3,700 | 2 | 2 | 1130 | Co-op | |||
3A | $3,300 | 2 | 1 | 1100 | Co-op | |||
14D | $3,100 | 1 | 1 | Co-op | Carolyn Romberg | |||
2A | $3,050 | 2 | 1 | 1100 | Co-op | |||
11B | $3,000 | 2 | 2 | Co-op | ||||
7N | $2,750 | 1 | 1 | 730 | Co-op | Cesar NegronCarolyn Romberg | ||
10J | $2,525 | 1 | 1 | 820 | Co-op | Cesar Negron | ||
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