A double-width Romanesque revival townhouse in Park Slope has listed at $18.5 million, and the inventory reads less like a real-estate disclosure than a gallery checklist.
The seller, Lillian Heidenberg, is asking $18.5 million for the property, which sits in Brooklyn’s most aggressively landmarked neighborhood and occupies a footprint roughly twice the width of its neighbors.
The home includes a private elevator — a feature whose rarity in the borough the listing does not undersell — along with the kind of room count and ceiling height that requires a floor plan to fully process.
Among the contents noted in coverage of the listing: an Alex Katz, hanging in residence as though the address were an extension of the secondary market.
Park Slope townhouses at this price point are not unknown, but they are not common. The last time a comparable double-wide on a landmarked block moved at this level, the buyer spent the next eighteen months in renovation permits.
The elevator, for the record, is already installed.