| ID # | RLS10937988 |
| Butiran Hartanah | 1 bilik tidur, 1 bilik mandi, 1 bilik mandi kecil, Mesin Basuh, Pengering, dalaman: 2400 ft2, 223m2 |
| Cukai (setahun) | $34,380 |
| Kereta Bawah Tanah | 7 minit: 1 |
| 10 minit: A, C, E, B, D, F, M | |
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392 West Street // 6 Weehawken Street
Dibina pada tahun 1834, bangunan bersejarah ini yang berukuran 28.25 kaki x 28.84 kaki hampir tidak berubah dari cara ia kelihatan pada pertengahan abad ke-19 dengan bumbung yang curam dan tangga sisi di pintu masuk Weehawken.
Rumah kayu berselut dua setengah tingkat seluas 2400 SF ini dikatakan sebagai rumah tertua yang masih berdiri di Greenwich Village. Dan semua pelbagai bentuknya selama dua abad mencerminkan perubahan besar yang berlaku di bahagian West Village ini, hanya beberapa langkah dari Sungai Hudson. Kisah 6 Weehawken Street (392 West Street) bermula pada tahun 1830-an. Itulah ketika Weehawken Street yang kecil dicipta di bekas tapak Penjara Newgate State.
Setelah Newgate ditutup, bandar memutuskan untuk mengubah hartanah itu menjadi pasar hasil, daging, dan ikan yang dikenali sebagai Greenwich Market (salah satu daripada banyak pasar terbuka di sepanjang Sungai Hudson pada masa itu) yang dibatasi oleh Christopher Street dan Amos Street, nama abad ke-19 bagi West 10th Street hari ini. Pada tahun 1920-an, dengan Prohibition berkuatkuasa, 6 Weehawken menjadi "Billie's Original Clam Broth House" dan pada tahun 1940-an menjadi kedai runcit yang menjual pakaian kerja, sarung tangan kanvas, tembakau, dan pelbagai barang aneh yang dikehendaki oleh pelaut dan pekerja pelabuhan.
Dengan hadapan di kedua-dua West Street dan Weehawken, dan zon untuk komersial serta kediaman, permata kecil yang serbaguna ini menanti penampilan seterusnya.
Bawa arkitek anda dan imaginasi anda. 1550 +/- FAR TERSEDIA
392 West Street // 6 Weehawken Street
Built in 1834 this Landmarked 28.25 ft x 28.84 ft charmer sits almost unchanged from the way it looked in the mid-19th century with its steeply pitched roof and side staircase on the Weehawken entrance.
This two and a half story shingled, 2400 SF wooden house is said to be the oldest house still standing in Greenwich Village. And all of its various incarnations over two centuries reflect the enormous changes that took place in this part of the West Village, just steps from the Hudson River. The story of 6 Weehawken Street (392 West Street) begins in the 1830s. That's when tiny Weehawken Street was created on the former site of Newgate State Prison.
After Newgate was closed, the city decided to turn the property into a produce, meat, and fish market called Greenwich Market (one of many open-air markets along the Hudson River at the time) bounded by Christopher Street and Amos Street, the 19th century name for today's West 10th Street.In the 1920s, with Prohibition in effect, 6 Weehawken became "Billie's Original Clam Broth House" and in the 1940s a retail shoppe carrying work clothes, canvas gloves, tobacco, and a strange assortment of odds and ends desired by seafarers and dockwallopers.
With frontage on both West Street and Weehawken, and zoned for commercial as well as residential, this versatile little gem awaits its next incarnation.
Bring your architect and your imagination. 1550 +/- FAR AVAILABLE
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 The Real Estate Board of New York, Inc., All rights reserved.







