English Garden Unit Just a Block from the Zoo: 1969 N. Lincoln in East Lincoln Park

For many people, the location of this 2-bedroom english garden unit at 1969 N. Lincoln in East Lincoln Park is ideal.

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It is close to Lincoln Park, the Zoo and the lake as well as the restaurants and shopping of Old Town and Armitage Street.

This 2-bedroom garden unit has similar bells and whistles of the above-ground units including hardwood floors, exposed brick, central air and an in-unit washer/dryer.

It also has a wood burning fireplace which is something you don’t see every day in a garden unit.

The listing says it has a remodeled bath. The kitchen has white cabinets and appliances.

Mark Goldberg at Prudential Rubloff has the listing. See the pictures here.

Unit #1: 2 bedrooms, 1 bath

  • Sold in May 2006 for $272,000
  • Originally listed in March 2010 for $299,000
  • Reduced
  • Currently listed for $275,000
  • Assessments of $112 a month
  • Taxes of $3071
  • Central Air
  • No parking
  • In-unit washer/dryer
  • Bedroom #1: 13×10
  • Bedroom #2: 10×8
  • Living room: 18×15
  • Kitchen: 15×9

11 Responses to “English Garden Unit Just a Block from the Zoo: 1969 N. Lincoln in East Lincoln Park”

  1. For me, I couldn’t even begin to consider buying a below-grade unit. Feel like they’re rental options-only. Having lived in the “down” of a duplex-down rental before, the lack of light and the issue with moisture (let alone the floods I dealt with, twice in two years) are deal-breakers.

    I get that it’s an option to get a great location for less money, but would advise anyone I knew to simply keep saving or look elsewhere. Do others disagree with me on this?

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  2. If this wasn’t a garden unit right on a main drag, it might have some legs, but I wouldn’t want to sign myself up for that. Great location. The interior looks nice (if somewhat cramped in areas, especially that bathroom). I have no idea of what I’d say it’s “worth”, but I think given relatively low taxes and assessments, $230k-$250k seems ok.

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  3. “right on a main drag”

    That understates the, uh … challenges, of the location. Unless you work at Gamekeepers or Stanley’s, in which case your commute *rocks*!

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  4. I like $249,900 for this one.

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  5. This is a dungeon perfect for a little D&D. Where’s my d20 when I need it?

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  6. English garden unit = dark, damp basement. Pass.

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  7. Alex: “$1,175 per month”

    HD: “Alex, what is the advertised rent on Craigslist for a garden apartment a block from Lincoln Park?”

    http://chicago.craigslist.org/chc/apa/1690270116.html

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  8. English = boring?

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  9. “This is a dungeon perfect for a little D&D. Where’s my d20 when I need it?”

    Funniest line I’ve ever read on CC. I’d pay 1,200 g.p.’s for this unit.

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  10. HD: But if you are going to game in your dungeon, at least do it with class:

    http://www.geekchichq.com/Co_Store/The_Showroom/The_Sultan/The_Sultan.html

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  11. Bottom unit = possible mold / flooding issues and little to no natural light. Unless your Barney from the Simpson’s “Natural light, get it off me, get it off me”, I feel bad for whoever buys here. Also, since when did 8×10 qualify as a bedroom? And whoever buys here will see a huge increase in their electric bill with the oven right next to the refrigerator. Man that kitchen setup really “Grinds my gears!”

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