Apartments with Outdoor SpaceCrown Heights, Brooklyn

Apartments with Outdoor Space in Crown Heights, Brooklyn (2026)

Private outdoor space is a premium NYC amenity. Options include balconies (small, typically 40-80 sqft), terraces (larger, 100+ sqft), rooftops (often shared but sometimes private), and ground-floor gardens (most rare). Expect a 10-25% rent premium for genuine private outdoor access. In Crown Heights specifically, the market is competitive but manageable — with 10 subway stations nearby and a median listing around $1.3M.

Crown Heights at a glance

Livability
5.9/10
Median price
$1.3M
Subway stations
10
Borough rank
#15/32

Crown Heights scores a middle-of-the-road 5.9—solid transit and financial fundamentals offset weaker commute times and cultural density for pragmatic buyers.

What to look for in a outdoor space apartment in Crown Heights

Crown Heights has a specific housing profile that affects your outdoor space search. The area has decent practical bones, and the building stock skews toward higher-end inventory. These are the considerations that matter most here:

  • Private vs shared outdoor space (shared rooftops are common, private rare)
  • Direction the space faces (south-facing gets most sun)
  • Furniture load limits on older balconies
  • Rooftop access hours and rules
  • Garden-level privacy versus street-level exposure

How to verify a outdoor space listing

Listings often over-promise on amenities. Before you sign a lease for a claimed outdoor space apartment in Crown Heights, run through this verification checklist:

  • Physically access the outdoor space during your viewing
  • Check if the landlord requires permission for furniture, plants, or grilling
  • Verify the load rating of balconies (especially in pre-war buildings)
  • Ask about shared rooftop access hours and reservation policies
  • Look for drainage and flooring condition on terraces

About Crown Heights, Brooklyn

Crown Heights is a dense, mixed-income neighborhood where you'll walk tree-lined blocks—averaging 172 trees within 200 meters—past Caribbean restaurants, bodegas, and brownstones. The Brooklyn Museum anchors the eastern edge, and Prospect Park sits roughly 2.3 kilometers away, accessible via multiple transit lines (2, 3, 4, 5, S trains cluster around Franklin Avenue and Eastern Parkway). You'll encounter heavy foot traffic on main streets, storefront churches alongside galleries, and a neighborhood that feels lived-in rather than polished. The canopy is moderate at 4.7/10 density, so summer heat hits the pavement.

Crown Heights scores 5.9/10 overall on DwellCheck's livability index, ranking #15 of 32 in Brooklyn. The median listing price in Crown Heights is $1.3M at $1109/sqft. Crown Heights has 10 subway stations within walking distance: Franklin Av-Medgar Evers College/Botanic Garden, Kingston Av, President St-Medgar Evers College.

Crown Heights averages 172 trees within 200m of each address, with a canopy density score of 4.7/10. Nearest major parks: Prospect Park, Fort Greene Park (avg 2305m away).

Who Crown Heights is best for

Long-term investor

Investment score of 6.3 (above borough median of 5.8) and median prices of $1.3M suggest stable property values; 79% condo ownership offers liquidity

Museum and culture proximity seeker

Brooklyn Museum is steps away; livability score of 5.3 reflects walkable cultural institutions and diverse dining, though not high nightlife/entertainment density

Transit-dependent commuter

Commute score of 6.4 is below borough median (8.0), but seven subway lines serve the neighborhood—adequate for outer-borough connectivity, not premium

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I know about finding a outdoor space place in Crown Heights?

Median listing in Crown Heights runs $1.3M ($1109/sqft). Crown Heights ranks #15/32 in Brooklyn on livability (5.9/10). Known for caribbean culture and brooklyn museum, Crown Heights has a rental market where outdoor space options depend heavily on building era and management. Crown Heights scores a middle-of-the-road 5.9—solid transit and financial fundamentals offset weaker commute times and cultural density for pragmatic buyers.

How much should I expect to pay in Crown Heights?

Median listing in Crown Heights is around $1.3M ($1109/sqft). Apartments with Outdoor Space typically run a slight premium over standard units in the same building. Listings sit an average of 89 days on market here, so you have some breathing room to compare options.

Is Crown Heights actually a good fit for someone looking for a outdoor space apartment?

Depends on your priorities. Crown Heights scores 6.6/10 on practical livability and 6.4/10 on commute access. It tends to work best for long-term investor. The outdoor space inventory specifically depends on building stock, which you can verify address by address.

How do I get around from Crown Heights?

You have 10 subway stations within walking distance. The closest are Franklin Av-Medgar Evers College/Botanic Garden (2 3 4 5 S) and Kingston Av (3). Commute times to Manhattan are moderate.

What about safety in Crown Heights?

Block-by-block variation is significant — two addresses a quarter mile apart can have very different safety profiles. Brooklyn averages 224.5 reported incidents per 300m radius and 1.4 shooting incidents per 500m. The only way to know for a specific address is to check the NYPD data within a walking radius.

Are there parks or green space near Crown Heights?

Crown Heights averages 172 trees within 200m of each address, with Prospect Park about 2305m away. The outdoor score is 5.6/10. There is some green space, though it is not the area's strongest feature.

What ZIP code covers Crown Heights?

Crown Heights falls in 11216 (Bed-Stuy / Crown Heights) and 11225 (Crown Heights / Prospect Lefferts Gardens) and 11238 (Prospect Heights / Crown Heights). The neighborhood straddles multiple postal zones, which is common in NYC — make sure any address you are comparing is in the same ZIP for fair price comparisons.

Check a specific Crown Heights address

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