Brooklyn
Queens
| Metric | Midwood | Ridgewood |
|---|---|---|
| Median Sale Price | $1,193,750 | $1,325,000 |
| Median Condo Price | $560,000 | N/A |
| Median Co-op Price | $237,500 | N/A |
| Median Rent | $2,530 | $3,250 |
| Active Listings | 187 | 45 |
| Rental Inventory | 192 | 309 |
| Days on Market | 107 | 86.5 |
| Price Cut Share | 10.7% | 8.9% |
| Monthly Sales Volume | 28 | 6 |
| YoY Price Change | +121.1% | +43.2% |
| YoY Rent Change | -9.6% | +1.6% |
| YoY Inventory Change | +34.5% | +95.7% |
| Subway Lines | N/A | N/A |
Midwood is a tree-lined Brooklyn neighborhood anchored by the landmarked Fiske Terrace-Midwood Park Historic District, which preserves over 250 early 20th-century homes in Colonial Revival, Queen Anne, and Craftsman styles. The housing stock ranges from freestanding Victorian homes and limestone rowhouses to six-story prewar apartment buildings along Kings Highway. The B, Q, and F trains serve the neighborhood, and Brooklyn College's Georgian-style campus provides a notable architectural landmark at its southern edge.
View Full Market ReportRidgewood features orderly blocks of brick and limestone rowhouses, prewar tenements with decorative cornices, and multi-family buildings constructed between 1905 and 1925, making it one of Queens' most architecturally consistent neighborhoods. The M train runs through the heart of the area with stops at Seneca Avenue, Forest Avenue, and Fresh Pond Road, while the L train connects at Myrtle-Wyckoff Avenues. Highland Park and Ridgewood Reservoir border the neighborhood to the south, and the Vander Ende-Onderdonk House, an 18th-century landmark, marks the historic Queens-Brooklyn boundary.
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