In 2009, it went on the market for $4.2 million and today Brownstoner reports that 28 Middagh Street has been sold for $3 million.
The home was also part of our thinkpiece “Out of Context, Fugly or Brilliant” covering many of the architectural “curiosites” of Brooklyn Heights:
Despite the fact that it has an award winning interior restoration, this 1829 home draws the ire of the current AIA guide which says that its facade has been “mutilated beyond recognition.”
As for how it got that way, Brown Harris Stevens broker Gabriel Ford told the Brooklyn Eagle, “Sometime after 1940, someone removed the front stairway, added asbestos shingles, created a side entry and added a two-car garage…In their mind they probably thought they were modernizing it, but it looked horrible.” Cranky preservationists aside, the one car garage here makes it a sweet deal for some.