Red Hook Today is Like the East Village Circa 1991!

2006_06_redhookhouse.jpgAfter reports surfaced of a two-family townhouse being sold in Red Hook for $1.06 million, the NY Post had to find out who would pay that much - and why. It turns out that East Village residents Frank and Tina Dituri bought the house because it "reminded [them] of how the East Village was 15 years ago: Young people coming in doing interesting things and putting their own stamp on it." And the space was a factor - the house is 2400 square feet, so the Dituris got a good deal if you're thinking just in terms of price per square foot (Manhattan prices start at $1000 per square foot) and in terms of the taxi fare they'll have to give their Manhattan friends to visit. The Post gets some color from the broker:

Marsha Yarde, a broker with Fillmore Real Estate who arranged the sale, called it a "record-breaking price for a two-family home" in Red Hook.

Real-estate agents estimate the same property would have sold for only about $350,000 five years ago and $150,000 a decade ago.

"Red Hook is the new 'it' community - it's like SoHo 30 years ago and the Meatpacking District 10 years ago," Yarde said.

Red Hook is certainly hip and "it"-like, but we're afraid that calling it SoHo and the Meatpacking District is like a death knell - do Red Hook residents really want their neighborhood turn into a big mall (okay, strip mall) or afterhours destination? If anything, Red Hook seems more a magnet for people wanting to settle down and nest, versus party hard every night - unless Fairway's cafe stays open until 1AM..

In other Brooklyn real estate news, Billy Joel and his wife reportedly looked at a $12 million house in Brooklyn Heights, which makes us worried for anyone walking on the sidewalk, as the Piano Man has had problems controlling his car.

Postcard heralding "record-breaking" sale from brownstoner

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Comments (4) [rss]

yay gentrification! i mean 'progress'!

This isn't normal gentrification. This is some rich people who've been HAD. People that rich are going to be really disappointed in the distant, boring and desolate neighborhood they bought into! Ever take a cab to Red Hook? Bring a book.

Geez, if I had a million dollars to spend on a house, I'd at least pick one in a neighborhood that had a subway.

"Young people coming in doing interesting things and putting their own stamp on it."

Which they will squelch as soon as it becomes bothersome to them.

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