Manhattan | 10 Mitchell Place, No. 5B
Turtle Bay Co-op
$950,000
A two-bedroom, one-bath, roughly 600-square-foot apartment with an updated kitchen that has a breakfast bar, a walk-in closet in the primary bedroom, two closets in the second bedroom, a wood-burning fireplace, beamed ceilings, casement windows and through-the-wall heating and air-conditioning, on the fifth floor of a 13-story 1928 doorman building with a live-in superintendent, mail delivery service, bike and laundry rooms, basement storage and a roof deck. Niklas Hackstein, Compass, 718-666-1377; compass.com
Costs
Maintenance: $2,182 a month
Pros
Recent renovations include new windows and updates to the kitchen and bathroom.
Cons
The square footage is on the low side, though the layout makes the best of it.
Manhattan | 435 Convent Avenue, No. 44
Sugar Hill Prewar
$1.25 million
A four-bedroom, two-bath, roughly 1,700-square-foot apartment with original wainscoting and molding, French doors, a windowed kitchen with a pass-through, a salon with built-in bookshelves, a primary bedroom with two closets, and a home office with an en suite bath, on the fourth floor of a six-story co-op in the Hamilton Heights/Sugar Hill Historic District with a live-in superintendent, a laundry room, complimentary storage, bike racks, a meeting room and a garden with grilling stations. Steven Kopstein, 917-414-3653; theagencyre.com
Costs
Maintenance: $2,284 a month
Pros
The apartment’s kitchen, floors and lighting were updated in 2017. The building has a deep history and was once home to the Harlem Renaissance author Zora Neale Hurston.
Cons
The bathrooms are dated. Residents can’t control their own heat. Dogs are not allowed.
Brooklyn | 706 Hancock Street
Bedford-Stuyvesant Townhouse
$2.15 million
A 2,461-square-foot multifamily townhouse built in 1901, with a one-bedroom, one-and-a-half-bath apartment with a washer/dryer and patio beneath a two-bedroom, two-and-a-half-bath duplex with an open kitchen and living area, four skylights, two decorative fireplaces, space for a home office, a washer/dryer, a deck and a backyard. Nadia Bartolucci and Samuel Weyser, Douglas Elliman, 646-673-0614; elliman.com
Costs
Taxes: $5,556 a year
Pros
The primary bedroom is large, with ample space for a king-size bed. Updated mechanicals include two new hot-water heaters and central air-conditioning.
Cons
The upper unit has limited closet space.
Given the fast pace of the current market, some properties may no longer be available at the time of publication.
For weekly email updates on residential real estate news, sign up here.