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For more information on the properties listed below, including financing and restrictions, please |
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| An Asylum Hill icon, this fanciful home stands sentinel at the end Atwood Street, near the Saint Francis Medical Center campus. Known by area residents as the “Castle”, its gables and turret are a local landmark. The home includes two units, a rental unit on the first floor, and an owner’s unit on the second and third floor. The owner’s unit features three bedrooms and two full baths in over 2,100 square feet of finished living space. The façade of the home will be completely restored and its unique architectural elements retained, including the first and second floor porches, conical tower, and diamond-pane windows. |

Download brochure for The Castle
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| This late-Victorian home combines Queen Anne styling with a projecting Dutch gambrel roof. The home will include two units, a rental unit on the first floor, and an owner’s unit on the second and third floor. The owner’s unit features four bedrooms and two full baths in almost 2,000 square feet of finished living space. In addition, 700 square feet of unfinished “bonus space” will be available to the rear of third floor which can be utilized by the owner as storage space or eventually built out as work space, entertainment space, additional bedrooms or other uses . The façade of the home will be carefully restored and the first and second floor porches rebuilt. Includes a three-car garage at the rear of the property. |

Download brochure for Queen Anne with Dutch Touch |
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~SOLD~ |
| This Victorian Queen Anne home features three bedrooms and two and a half baths in almost 2,000 square feet of finished living space. In addition, 450 square feet of unfinished “bonus space” is available on third floor which can be utilized as storage space or built out as work or entertainment space. First floor has oak flooring and a fireplace. A new open patio will be built in the rear of the home. Backyard is fenced in for additional privacy. |
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| A classic brick Italianate home constructed around 1870 by Franklin Smith, one of Hartford’s premier builders of the Victorian era.This elegant single-family home features three bedrooms and two full baths on the first two floors and flexible third floor “bonus space” which can be utilized by the owner as storage space or eventually built out as work space, entertainment space or additional bedrooms. The façade of the home will be carefully restored and a new entry portico of traditional design will be constructed. |
Download the Franklin Smith House brochure
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| One of the oldest homes in Asylum Hill, 18 Ashley Street features a sunken living room with a ten-foot ceiling. This unique feature is the result of the first floor being lowered to accommodate commercial uses including, at one time, an Asian grocery store. Other features of this brick Italianate home include over 2,100 square feet of finished living space on two floors and flexible third floor “bonus space”. The first floor will feature a living room, kitchen, dining room, and den. The second floor contains three bedrooms including a master bedroom suite with a full bath and walk-in closet. |
Download brochure for Asian Market House
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| During the years immediately before and after the Civil War, Asylum Hill emerged as the most prestigious neighborhood in Hartford. Gracious homes lined the main avenues and cross streets, many built in a new, distinctive style known as the Italianate, in honor of the villas of Northern Italy from which this style drew its inspiration. 221 Garden Street is an excellent surviving example of this style. Its elaborate porticos, brick exterior, brownstone lintels and sills, and low pyramidal roof with wide overhang are hallmarks of the Italianate style in Hartford. Inside, its expansive floor plan with over 2,500 square feet of finished living space and 805 square feet of third floor “bonus space” is the epitome of graceful, urban living. |

Download brochure for
The Grand Italianate
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