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House in Brooklyn Heights’ Picturesque Colonnade Row Asks $4.525 Million
The article features a Greek Revival house at 49 Willow Place in Brooklyn Heights, currently on the market for $4.525 million. This residence is part of a rare, picturesque row of four Greek Revival colonnade houses, a style considered modern in the 1830s and 1840s, and now scarce in 21st-century Brooklyn. While the interior of the house underwent a gut renovation in the early 2000s, its exterior maintains its original character as part of a visually unified stretch of two-story brick houses, distinguished by simple wooden columns that form the colonnade.
Historical records suggest this particular row on Willow Place was completed by the mid to late 1840s. City directories indicate residents were present in some of these houses by 1847. Notably, in early 1849, one of the houses in the row was acquired by the Oneida Association, a utopian religious community established in 1848, serving as their Brooklyn branch. The Association, comprised of "Perfectionists," later expanded to include another house in the row the following year. An 1888 article described the row on Willow Place, then considered a deteriorating street, as having been constructed by Anson Blake, though the attribution is not definitively confirmed. Blake was a real estate figure of the period and owned at least one other colonnade row nearby.
The 1850 census shows William and Sarah Owens residing at 49 Willow Place (then known as No. 47) with their six children and a servant. William Owens was employed as a glassblower. Advertisements for the Oneida properties in 1857 provide insight into the typical interior features of these houses, including nine rooms, marble mantels, sliding doors, and gas service. The renovated interior of 49 Willow Place retains some of these historic elements, such as marble mantels, a period newel post, and wide-plank floorboards, while integrating modern amenities like updated wet rooms and central air.
The house spans four floors, with the garden level housing the dining area and kitchen. The floor above features double parlors, and the top two floors are dedicated to bedrooms. The residence offers ample bathroom facilities, with three bathrooms distributed across the bedroom floors and a powder room on the garden level. The double parlors are separated by pocket doors, each featuring a black marble mantel and a wood-burning fireplace. The front parlor is equipped with full-height windows overlooking the front porch.
The modern kitchen, located at the rear of the garden level, is fitted with wood cabinets and stainless steel appliances, including a stove hood. A long peninsula effectively separates the cooking area from the dining space. A brick fireplace is also present in this area, and a door provides access to a compact rear yard. The second floor accommodates two bedrooms and two bathrooms, one of which is en suite. On the top floor, only the rear-facing bedroom and its small attached office have external windows; the front bedroom and its corresponding bathroom are illuminated by skylights. The rear yard includes a paved patio suitable for dining, along with planting beds and space for container gardening. The property last changed hands in 2004 for $2.3 million. The current listing is held by Jeb Hart of Corcoran.
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