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The Corcoran Group, a Luxury Real Estate Company, Logo

Longview
380 4th Avenue, Gowanus, Brooklyn, NY 11215

New Development Rental

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Occupancy: Spring 2025
197 residences
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  • 197 residences
  • 17 stories
  • BUILT 2024

The Details

About 380 4th Avenue, Gowanus, Brooklyn, NY 11215

Live in Style. Live the Longview. Overlooking the tranquil tree-lined streets of Park Slope with its signature brownstones is LONGVIEW, a design-forward new development debuting a striking collection of thoughtfully envisioned one, one-bedroom + home office and two-bedroom homes offering a commitment to quality that stands the test of time. Located at the crossroads of Brooklyn’s two most sought-after neighborh...

key features

  • Central air
  • Central laundry room
  • Common garden
  • Common roof deck
  • Concierge
  • Doorman
  • Exercise room
  • Garage

Listing agent

Longview by Corcoran New Development

Longview by Corcoran New Development

Staff

Longview Residences

AddressPriceBedsBathsHalf BathsInterior Sq.FtTypeContactFloorplan
380 4th Avenue | 2E$6,92322ExclusiveLongview by Corcoran New Development
380 4th Avenue | 3E$6,34622ExclusiveLongview by Corcoran New Development
380 4th Avenue | 3J$6,30022ExclusiveLongview by Corcoran New Development
380 4th Avenue | 8D$5,00811ExclusiveLongview by Corcoran New Development
380 4th Avenue | 2F$4,66211ExclusiveLongview by Corcoran New Development
380 4th Avenue | 11H$4,54611ExclusiveLongview by Corcoran New Development
380 4th Avenue | 11G$4,52311ExclusiveLongview by Corcoran New Development
380 4th Avenue | 3L$4,50011ExclusiveLongview by Corcoran New Development

Get to know Gowanus

Only in the sprawling, chill, and canal-retentive Gowanus can you find bold new developments and Michelin-starred restaurants interweaved with shuffleboard courts and a casket factory. Gowanus has worn many hats through the six centuries since its first mill turned a wheel — Revolutionary War battlefield, manufacturing hub, and artful hipster haven, to name only a few. However, nothing has come to define it more than its singular manmade waterway. Industry long prospered on the Gowanus Canal, transforming the sunken meadows between higher-grounded Park Slope and Carroll Gardens into a bustling manufacturing hub; in fact, much of the brownstone that built those surrounding neighborhoods was barged right in. While the superfund stream, affectionately nicknamed the “Lavender Lake” for its purplish sheen, became a longtime pain point locally, the progressing clean-up will ensure these inland waters define a positive future for the neighborhood that grew along its bulkhead.

Gowanus Neighborhood Guide