
The five-story Park Slope townhouse that once housed Al Capone sold for $5.82 million after listing at $6.25 million. Capone lived at 38 Garfield Place as a child before moving to Chicago and rising to infamy as "Public Enemy No. 1." The property underwent a ground-up renovation that kept the historic brick facade while gutting and refitting interiors with Italian marble, bespoke millwork, Carrara fish-scale tiles, and Calcutta Oro countertops. The expanded 4,000+ square-foot home spans five stories with four bedrooms, five full baths, three powder rooms, a deep 113-foot lot, and dramatic garden-level double-height ceilings.
"Everyone thought it was super cool," Bartolucci said."
""Public Enemy No. 1.""
""Coupled with the fact that this specific lot was unusually deep, at 113 feet deep,""
Read at New York Post
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]