Real Estate
Chloe Sevigny Is Leaving Park Slope (and Reportedly House-Hunting in SoHo)
Could this mean Manhattan is cool again?

PARK SLOPE, BROOKLYN — Everlasting NYC "it girl" Chloe Sevigny, whose mere twitch of the pinky can upend a city trend or launch a new one, has reportedly set her gaze back on Lower Manhattan after just barely passing the three-year mark in Brooklyn.
The actress and tastemaker put her prewar Park Slope co-op — located at 9 Prospect Park West, overlooking the park — back on the market this week for $2.75 million, according to the real-estate blog Brownstoner. She originally purchased the apartment for $2 million back in October 2013.
"After 10 years of living in the East Village — I was on 10th Street between 2nd and 3rd — I was like, 'Get me the fu*k out of here,'" Sevigny told the Daily Beast at the time. "I was looking around a lot in Manhattan, but the prices were exorbitant. And then I looked in Brooklyn, and I didn’t want to live in 'hip' Brooklyn, so I moved out to the dorkiest, hokiest neighborhood — Park Slope — and I’m really feeling the vibes out there."
Find out what's happening in Park Slopefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Here are some pics of the Park Slope apartment from Corcoran, the real-estate firm handling the sale:






"Located in Park Slope's finest, full service 'white glove' cooperative building, Residence 2C is an exquisite blend of old meets new," the listing for Sevigny's old apartment says. "This four bedroom, three bathroom home has been lovingly cared for and recently received many updates."
Find out what's happening in Park Slopefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
For her part, Sevigny may be looking to move back across the East River. According to the Luxury Listings NYC real-estate blog, Sevigny was spotted touring a gorgeous white-brick loft at 114 Mercer St. in SoHo a couple months back.
Another buyer reportedly snatched up the $3.5 million SoHo apartment before she made a bid — but at the very least, now we know things are looking up for Lower Manhattan's waning hip factor.
Lead photo by Arthur Kade/Wikimedia Commons
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