Renderings Reveal 288 Water Street Condominiums in Vinegar Hill, Brooklyn

Rendering of 288 Water Street

EDRE Development has revealed the first renderings of 288 Water Street, a new condominium property in Vinegar Hill, Brooklyn. Designed by EDRE with Issac & Stern Architects as the architect of record, the building will comprise just over 23,000 square feet with eight condominiums, three covered parking spaces, and a collection of amenities.

The collection of apartments range from three- to four-bedroom layouts, each with private outdoor space. The apartments feature minimalist interiors designed in an airy palette of white oak, natural limestone, and polished nickel accents.

Rendering of model home at 288 Water Street

Rendering of model home at 288 Water Street

This minimalist aesthetic extends to the exterior of the building, which features a white porcelain façade, multi-story windows, and glass-enclosed balconies.

Building amenities include a Japanese Zen Garden, a fitness center, a roof deck with barbecue grills, a lobby lounge, and a package room.

Available apartments are currently listed as $2.62 million for a three-bedroom unit.

Rendering of roof deck at 288 Water Street

Rendering of roof deck at 288 Water Street

Rendering of fitness center at 288 Water Street

Rendering of fitness center at 288 Water Street

Rendering of Japanese Zen Garden at 288 Water Street

Rendering of Japanese Zen Garden at 288 Water Street

Rendering of lobby lounge at 288 Water Street

Rendering of lobby lounge at 288 Water Street

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5 Comments on "Renderings Reveal 288 Water Street Condominiums in Vinegar Hill, Brooklyn"

  1. David in Bushwick | June 26, 2022 at 10:33 am | Reply

    Absolutely beautiful.

  2. It will be interesting to see if this turns out like the renderings. There are a lot of things there that could be value engineered.

  3. The building is beautifully designed, but as homes, for all of the millions of dollars, no laundry/linen closet, no place to put a vacuum cleaner, etc.

    • You know the article is not going to mention whether or not it has a small hall closet somewhere for a vacuum right?

      • The article might not, but, a real evaluation of these buildings should not only be about the surface asthetics but of the qualities they bring to the city. There is something about a $3 million dollar apartments without a linen closet – and, if one is curious enough to look up the building’s website, one can evaluate the skill and quality of a floor plan as easily as talking about a window detail?!

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