378 7th Street 378 7th Street, Park Slope, Brooklyn, NY 11215
Pre-war Co-op
- 8 residences
- 4 stories
- BUILT 1925
The Details About 378 7th Street
378 7th Street is a pre-war cooperative situated in a prime location. Around the corner on 6th Avenue are cherry and oak trees, an historic church and neighborhood school, and the beautiful Park Slope branch of the Brooklyn Public Library (due to re-open in 2012 after a three-year full restoration). Down the block awaits exciting 5th Avenue, with all the shops and restaurants you want and all t...
- Common garden
- NO UNDERLYING MORTGAGE
- Basement storage
378 7th Street Units
- transaction type
- Sold
Units | Price | Beds | Baths | Half Baths | Interior Sq.Ft | Type | Contact | Floorplan |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4R | $799,000 | 2 | 1 | Co-op | ||||
4L | $630,000 | 2 | 1 | 1000 | Co-op | Christian Powers | ||
Get to know Park Slope
Just as Central Park was the catalyst for Manhattan’s building boom, Prospect Park had a similar effect on Brooklyn when it opened in 1867; it just took a bit longer to get going. But by the 1880s and 1890s, Victorian mansions began going up on Prospect Park West — the so-called “Gold Coast” renowned for its park views. The opening of the Brooklyn Bridge in 1883 also hastened development, resulting in the construction of brick and brownstone townhouses. In the mid-20th century, Park Slope was ahead of its time. Those Victorian mansions, divided into apartments in the intervening years, started being restored to single-family homes in the 1960s. That grand 19th-century architecture, plus proximity to the park, drew and continues to draw residents. From long before Brooklyn’s current moment of cool, Park Slope has maintained an allure like nowhere else in the borough.
Park Slope Neighborhood Guide