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  • 10 MacDonough Street
  • $ 2,295,000
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
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10 MacDonough Street

Bedford Stuyvesant   |   Park Avenue & Myrtle Avenue
Listing ID: 105827TH

  • $ 2,295,000
  • Bedrooms
  • Bathrooms
  • TownhouseBuilding Type
  • 3,600 Approx. SF

  • Details
    • Multi-FamilyOwnership
    • $ 5,808Anual RE Taxes
    • 20'x45'Building Size
    • 20'x63'Lot Size
    • 1905Year Built
    • ActiveStatus

10 MacDonough Street Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn NY 11216
  • Description
  • A Story Worth Continuing.
    For forty-odd years, 10 Mac Donough Street has belonged to one family - three generations of them, raising children and welcoming grandchildren into the same rooms. Houses like this, lived in this deeply, rarely come to market intact. When they do, they tend to carry something you can feel before you can name.

    Built in 1905, this row house brick-brownstone is a classic 20-foot-wide Bedford-Stuyvesant specimen: roughly 3,600 square feet across four floors, with a full cellar pushing usable space close to 4,500. What sets it apart is how much of the original house is still here. Etched-glass double doors open behind the ironwork out front. Inside, pocket doors still slide, ceiling medallions still center the rooms they were made for, and the parquet floors - the good kind, laid by someone who cared - run uninterrupted through the parlor level. Ceilings are tall. Windows are oversized. The proportions are the reason people fall for these houses in the first place.

    The layout has shaped itself around multigenerational life. The garden level holds the kitchen, an informal living area, a full bath, and a mudroom that opens to the backyard. The parlor floor keeps its formal posture: front living room, rear office or den, powder room, all of it framed by the architectural detail the era is known for. The second floor, its own unit, has been reworked into a full primary suite - dressing area, bath, den, laundry. The top floor reads as its own world, with bedrooms, bath, kitchen, and office space arranged as a guest suite or something more independent.

    Because the property remains a legal three-family, the next chapter can go several directions. Restore it as it stands. Reimagine it as a single-family of nearly 4,500 square feet. Carve out a triplex over a garden rental. Or keep the three-family configuration, which is quietly becoming one of the more valuable things a Brooklyn townhouse can be - most of what's left on the market has been compromised by awkward conversions, tenant situations, or deferred maintenance, and developers keep converting what remains into one- and two-family homes. Intact three-families, genuinely cared for, are a shrinking category.

    The mechanicals have been updated. The bones are strong. Renovation here is an invitation, not a rescue project.

    Positioned just off Marcy Avenue and moments from Fulton Street, the very best of Bedford-Stuyvesant is at your doorstep. Rich in culture, community, and character, Bedford-Stuyvesant remains one of Brooklyn's most beloved neighborhoods. Local favorites, everyday conveniences, and excellent transportation options are all nearby, connecting you easily to the rest of Brooklyn and Manhattan.

    Some houses are bought. This one gets continued.

    Find your sweet spot.

    A Story Worth Continuing.
    For forty-odd years, 10 Mac Donough Street has belonged to one family - three generations of them, raising children and welcoming grandchildren into the same rooms. Houses like this, lived in this deeply, rarely come to market intact. When they do, they tend to carry something you can feel before you can name.

    Built in 1905, this row house brick-brownstone is a classic 20-foot-wide Bedford-Stuyvesant specimen: roughly 3,600 square feet across four floors, with a full cellar pushing usable space close to 4,500. What sets it apart is how much of the original house is still here. Etched-glass double doors open behind the ironwork out front. Inside, pocket doors still slide, ceiling medallions still center the rooms they were made for, and the parquet floors - the good kind, laid by someone who cared - run uninterrupted through the parlor level. Ceilings are tall. Windows are oversized. The proportions are the reason people fall for these houses in the first place.

    The layout has shaped itself around multigenerational life. The garden level holds the kitchen, an informal living area, a full bath, and a mudroom that opens to the backyard. The parlor floor keeps its formal posture: front living room, rear office or den, powder room, all of it framed by the architectural detail the era is known for. The second floor, its own unit, has been reworked into a full primary suite - dressing area, bath, den, laundry. The top floor reads as its own world, with bedrooms, bath, kitchen, and office space arranged as a guest suite or something more independent.

    Because the property remains a legal three-family, the next chapter can go several directions. Restore it as it stands. Reimagine it as a single-family of nearly 4,500 square feet. Carve out a triplex over a garden rental. Or keep the three-family configuration, which is quietly becoming one of the more valuable things a Brooklyn townhouse can be - most of what's left on the market has been compromised by awkward conversions, tenant situations, or deferred maintenance, and developers keep converting what remains into one- and two-family homes. Intact three-families, genuinely cared for, are a shrinking category.

    The mechanicals have been updated. The bones are strong. Renovation here is an invitation, not a rescue project.

    Positioned just off Marcy Avenue and moments from Fulton Street, the very best of Bedford-Stuyvesant is at your doorstep. Rich in culture, community, and character, Bedford-Stuyvesant remains one of Brooklyn's most beloved neighborhoods. Local favorites, everyday conveniences, and excellent transportation options are all nearby, connecting you easily to the rest of Brooklyn and Manhattan.

    Some houses are bought. This one gets continued.

    Find your sweet spot.

    Listing Courtesy of Corcoran Group
  • Contact
  • William Abramson

    License Licensed As: William D. Abramson

    Director of Brokerage, Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker

    W: 646-637-9062
    M: 917-295-7891
    • Email Me
    • Download Contact

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  • Contact
  • William Abramson

    License Licensed As: William D. Abramson

    Director of Brokerage, Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker

    W: 646-637-9062
    M: 917-295-7891
    • Email Me
    • Download Contact

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This information is not verified for authenticity or accuracy and is not guaranteed and may not reflect all real estate activity in the market. ©2026 REBNY Listing Service, Inc. All rights reserved. Additional building data provided by On-Line Residential [OLR].
All information furnished regarding property for sale, rental or financing is from sources deemed reliable, but no warranty or representation is made as to the accuracy thereof and same is submitted subject to errors, omissions, change of price, rental or other conditions, prior sale, lease or financing or withdrawal without notice. All dimensions are approximate. For exact dimensions, you must hire your own architect or engineer.