Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill|News|
Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill Area Home Prices Up Recently
Home prices are higher in the Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill area recently. See how much.

Home prices are higher in the Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill area recently. See how much.

Single-family homes have seen the largest rent increases. See how rent changed in the Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill area.

Here is how much home prices have changed over the past year in Brooklyn area.
Important new resources from our partners at Right to Counsel NYC Coalition, Just Fix, and Housing Justice for All.
Check out the new, below-market rental apartments at 346 Bergen Street.
A controversial development at 80 Flatbush Ave. will include the first 100 percent electric residential building, developers announced.
The "Don't Know Why" singer's Amity Street home comes with a lap pool, garden and five bedrooms.
A month after a lawsuit against the Boerum Hill-Fort Greene site was settled, developers are starting to put in permits for its 3 buildings.
Only one Brooklyn street made it into the top 15 of NYC's most expensive streets, where the median home sold for more than $2 million.
Homes near the Carroll Street subway stop are worth 150 percent than a typical home in the neighborhood, a new study found.
A settlement reached with neighbors who sued over 80 Flatbush Ave. buildings will let the controversial project move forward.
The neighborhood jumped from the 12th to the fourth most expensive in NYC and dethroned Carroll Gardens as Brooklyn's priciest.
See inside the five-floor townhouse that comes with a private elevator, three fireplaces and two-story windows, all for a cool $8 million.
A health profile for the Park Slope, Carroll Gardens district found it has the lowest percent of tenants burdened by their rent prices.
Prices in this area jumped nearly 200 percent in a year, landing it first in BK and seventh citywide in a new report.
This 19th-century Amity Street house was built by a shipmaster for his daughter, and could be yours — for $4.8 million.
The former detective bought up properties in Red Hook and Cobble Hill before Brooklyn became a real estate hotspot, Bloomberg reports.
Prices are still cheaper than some waterfront spots, but have gone up faster than any other neighborhood so far this year.
The Columbia Street Waterfront passed Dumbo as BK's most expensive neighborhood and Carroll Gardens landed in the top 10 for the first time.
Developers will no longer try to rezone a section of Summit Street to build a seven-story apartment building.
The expensive lowest-priced option represents just how far a trend of increasing real estate prices has gone in the Brooklyn neighborhood.
Residents claim two high-rises planned for 80 Flatbush Ave. violate zoning laws for their block of quiet brownstones.
The former global head of Airbnb will live closer to his new gig at the Brooklyn Navy Yard.
The corner penthouse would be most expensive condo sale in the neighborhood's history if it closes at this price.
Developers have requested permission to build a seven-unit apartment complex at the intersection of Summit Street and Hamilton Avenue.
The former Trump campaign chairman will have to give up his Carroll Gardens and SoHo properties.
The massive project would include two new schools, but advocates worry the outsize towers would cast a shadow over a beloved garden.
Manafort lied about renting his Union Street brownstone as part of a scheme to obtain a $3.4 million loan, bank officials testified.
City planners approved plans for a massive Boerum Hill development despite opposition from residents and local elected officials.
Adams called for a cap of 600-feet for one of the towers, instead of the planned 986-feet, along with a new subway entrance nearby.
A developer filed plans to build a six-unit apartment building on an empty West Ninth Street lot, New York YIMBY first reported.
You don't need a million bucks just to buy a home in Brooklyn.
The full Community Board 2 nearly unanimously voted down the plan that could bring two giant towers and schools to the area.
The former kindergarten at 236 President St. was put back on the market for $4.9 million after developers planned to demolish it for condos.
Community Board 2's Land Use Committee voted against the planned 80 Flatbush project, which would bring two giant towers to the area.
The city voted to calendar 236 and 238 President St., the first step in the process to landmark the buildings, after a push from electeds.
The agency will consider calendaring 236 and 238 President St., the first step in the process, after pols called on them to save it.
Sky-high prices got you down? Here are the top middle-class housing meccas.
The author sold his Pacific Street townhouse to "Million Dollar Listing" star Ryan Serhant, the Real Deal reported.
A group of local elected officials started a petition to landmark 236 and 238 President Street after getting wind of plans to tear one down.
Developers want to rezone a portion of Summit Street for a 55-foot-tall tower with 17 apartments, New York YIMBY reported.