Skip to main content
The Corcoran Group, a Luxury Real Estate Company, Logo

Concord Condos
178 Concord Street, Downtown Brooklyn, Brooklyn, NY 11201

New Development Condominium

building logo
Occupancy: Available for occupancy
7 residences
This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate.
  • 7 residences
  • 4 stories
  • BUILT 2019

The Details

About 178 Concord Street, Downtown Brooklyn, Brooklyn, NY 11201

The Concord Condominium is a collection of three townhouse-style elevator buildings offering studio to three bedroom homes – just 3 blocks to Wegmans and a few blocks to the A/C/F/B/Q/R/2/3 trains, Dekalb Market Hall, Trader Joe’s, Alamo Drafthouse Movie Theatre, Brooklyn Navy Yard, the Manhattan and Brooklyn Bridges and more! Occupancy

key features

  • Central air
  • Elevator

Listing agents

Concord Condos Residences

AddressPriceBedsBathsHalf BathsInterior Sq.FtTypeContactFloorplan
182 Concord Street | PHA-35$1,550,000321259ExclusiveThe Concord Sales Office
182 Concord Street | PH$1,115,00021991ExclusiveNick HovsepianLeslie MarshallJames Cornell
182 Concord Street | 3B-35$975,00022ExclusiveThe Concord Sales Office
182 Concord Street | 3A-35$959,00022819ExclusiveThe Concord Sales Office
182 Concord Street | 2A-35$949,00022819ExclusiveThe Concord Sales Office
182 Concord Street | 2B$815,00011613ExclusiveNick HovsepianJames CornellLeslie Marshall
178 Concord Street | 4A$807,78811689ExclusiveNick Hovsepian
182 Concord Street | 3B-178$805,00011656ExclusiveThe Concord Sales Office

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