Williamsburg-Greenpoint|News|
Williamsburg-Greenpoint Area Home Prices Up Recently
Home prices are higher in the Williamsburg-Greenpoint area recently. See how much.

Home prices are higher in the Williamsburg-Greenpoint area recently. See how much.

The fair market rent for a two-bedroom rental increased from the previous year.

Home prices are expected to stay elevated for the near future. They have increased in Brooklyn area.
New apartments on North Seventh Street hit the affordable housing lottery, but only for those making at least $79,000.
Seven new apartments available on Union Avenue can only go to those that make at least $77,000 a year, records show.
Two new buildings hit the affordable housing lottery, but only for those making either $89,000 or $74,000 a year, records show.
New one-bedroom apartments hit the affordable housing lottery on Metropolitan Avenue, but only for those making at least $75,806 a year.
Williamsburg was one of six NYC neighborhoods that passed the $1 million mark for median home prices, a new study found.
New units on South 3rd Street that hit the affordable lottery will cost $2,253 a month to rent, records show.
A new Throop Ave. building on the affordable housing lottery has studios, one-bedrooms and two-bedrooms for those making as little as $32K.
Apartments in three buildings hit the affordable housing lottery, some that require a $78,000 salary and others that require only $33,000.
New apartments on Stagg Street that hit the affordable housing lottery are up for grabs for at least $2,000 a month.
A dozen new apartments just hit the affordable housing lottery, but some will only go to those making at least $84,000 a year.
Three Greenpoint apartments and seven in Williamsburg hit the affordable housing lottery for those making 130 percent of the median income.
Renters should make $67,000 to $139,000 a year to afford these Driggs Avenue units that just hit the affordable housing lottery.
Units in two new buildings have hit the affordable housing lottery, one with a $2,211 monthly rent and another costing $930 per month.
Studio, one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments in the former governor's most recent Kent Ave development hit the affordable housing lottery.
Affordable apartments in three different neighborhood buildings are up for grabs this month.
New Yorkers who fear rent hikes will force them from their homes joined a national protest for changes to rent control laws.
A historic church in Williamsburg has sold its "air rights" to the residential developers next door to finance its own repairs.
Real estate experts said the library overhaul and other new developments make Greenpoint "where it's at" this year.
Most units are available to those making at least $42,000, but some require a salary as high as $81,840 to move in.
14 new units on Cook Street just hit the affordable housing lottery.
Landlords are dropping prices to fill a near all-time high number of vacant apartments before the L train halt in April.
The "Girls" creator left Brooklyn to be with her tribe in the West Village, aka "old people puttering around the health-food store."
The development comes just in time for the L train shutdown.
Localize.city estimated 20,000 people could move to Williamsburg, Bushwick and Greenpoint just as the L train stops running to Manhattan.
Weeknight trains stopped running this week and won't be coming back until December.
Here are the NYC neighborhoods where experts think Williamsburg residents will feel most at home.
Here is the "rare live/work mansion opportunity" you've been waiting for.
A new study found a slim silver lining to the impending 15-month L train shutdown.
The affordable units hit the market the same week de Blasio boasted of the program's success and critics blamed it for rising homelessness.
The former home of the neighborhood's favorite heavy metal bar will be torn down and replaced with an apartment building, records show.
The luxury condo project exposed tenants to "a constant cloud of toxic smoke and dust," the $10 million lawsuit says.
Just in time for hurricane season, a new study found thousands of apartments are being built in Brooklyn's flood zones.
A StreetEasy study found that "big budget" buyers were likely to find deals in north Brooklyn while affordable homes were harder to find.
Ever wonder what luxury living means for Brooklyn's richest? Check out the most expensive rentals in Williamsburg.
Developers announced they'll spend about $1 billion to build two towers on the Greenpoint waterfront.
Find out if you can afford an "affordable" home in Greenpoint.
One-bedroom apartments going for a little over $1,000 at 89 Bartlett St. and several buildings around Devoe Street went up on the lottery.
Sky-high prices got you down? Here are the top middle-class housing meccas.