The top five floors of the 6-story office building at 101 Clinton Street in Brooklyn Heights will be converted to 40 residential condominium apartments, according to an article by Linda Collins today at the brooklyneagle.com.
The building is also known as 165 Joralemon Street.
"Although Mark Sharfman of Joralemon Realty LLC (and the Sharfman Organization of Hartsdale, N.Y.), identified as the building's owner, would not discuss the project with the Eagle - (he said 'No comment,' when reached by phone) - DOB documents reveal that 40 residential units have been proposed for the five floors," the article said.
When completed, the 50,028-square-foot building will contain 41,690 square feet of residential space and 8,338 square feet of commercial space, according to DOB documents.
"Currently, the ground floor commercial space is occupied by the Clinton Food Market and Edible Arrangements, both of which continue to remain open for business. PropertyShark.com notes that the building was acquired by the current ownership, Joralemon Realty, in 1996. It also lists the building as having been constructed circa 1930, with alterations made in 1966," the article continued.
The building is not within the Brooklyn Heights Historic District.
The building is also known as 165 Joralemon Street.
"Although Mark Sharfman of Joralemon Realty LLC (and the Sharfman Organization of Hartsdale, N.Y.), identified as the building's owner, would not discuss the project with the Eagle - (he said 'No comment,' when reached by phone) - DOB documents reveal that 40 residential units have been proposed for the five floors," the article said.
When completed, the 50,028-square-foot building will contain 41,690 square feet of residential space and 8,338 square feet of commercial space, according to DOB documents.
"Currently, the ground floor commercial space is occupied by the Clinton Food Market and Edible Arrangements, both of which continue to remain open for business. PropertyShark.com notes that the building was acquired by the current ownership, Joralemon Realty, in 1996. It also lists the building as having been constructed circa 1930, with alterations made in 1966," the article continued.
The building is not within the Brooklyn Heights Historic District.
Architecture Critic
Carter Horsley
Since 1997, Carter B. Horsley has been the editorial director of CityRealty. He began his journalistic career at The New York Times in 1961 where he spent 26 years as a reporter specializing in real estate & architectural news. In 1987, he became the architecture critic and real estate editor of The New York Post.
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