Carriage houses started popping up in New York in the 1800s, built to accommodate horses, carts and later motorcars for the city’s burgeoning middle class. Today, these characterful buildings – packed with Victorian features – have become coveted New York real estate. Most have been converted into townhouses and apartments, with price-tags to match their storied pasts.
Here are 5 for sale or rent in the city right now.
139 Bond Street, Boerum Hill, Brooklyn
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2 bedrooms; $1.649m via Corcoran Group
Sitting in the Boerum Hill Historic district is this freshly renovated carriage house, set over three levels. A red brick exterior gives way to white-washed, light-filled interiors which have a minimalist bent, complete with blonde timber floors and a huge skylight that channels light into the ground floor living room and kitchen space.
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The master bedroom is on the lower floor, with a second bedroom on the top floor. The low-slung Brooklyn property also has a leafy rooftop terrace.
112 Waverly Place, Greenwich Village, Manhattan
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2 bedrooms; for rent via Stribling for $21,500 per month
A string of celebrities has called this Federal-style carriage house in Greenwich Village home, including Kate Moss, who rented it in the 1990s. The 1,800 sq ft Manhattan property is back on the rental market and includes a skylit living room with a 17-ft-high beamed ceiling.
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Brick walls and a wood burning fireplace can also be found inside the 19th-century, two-bedroom home.
167 E 69th St, Lenox Hill, Manhattan
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5 bedrooms; $16.95m via Leslie J Garfield
Carriage houses are usually on the compact side, but this 1908 neo-Georgian property bucks the trend with a 25-ft-wide facade. It’s undergone a complete redesign by studio Fairfax and Sammons, which has retained period details and introduced custom millwork.
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Interiors unfurl across 7,200 sq ft. The showstopper is the ground floor studio space, with its 14.5-ft-high skylit ceiling.
433 Waverly Avenue, Clinton Hill, Brooklyn
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4 bedrooms; $4.1m via Knight Frank
Sitting on a stretch of Waverly Avenue in Clinton Hill, known as ‘Carriage House Row’, this 19th-century Brooklyn property has featured in film and magazine shoots and has been completely restored. It’s set over three storeys and is currently configured as two, two-bedroom dwellings with two separate staircases. However, it could be turned into a single 4-5 bedroom home.
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A colossal, 40 ft living room occupies the second floor of the carriage house, while other features include 19th-century panelled doors, raftered ceilings and white-washed brickwork.
170 Eldridge St, Lower East Side, Manhattan
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4 bedrooms; $8.75m via Douglas Elliman
Among the period details on offer at 170 Eldridge Street is a hand-painted sign for Oppenheimer sausages, the product of entrepreneur, Sigmund Oppenheimer who owned the building in the 1920s. The Manhattan property was given a top-to-toe renovation in 1996, and its owners installed a two-level waterfall feature in the living room
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