Real Estate

How sweet it is: Brooklyn home with ice cream parlor lists for $9.95M

Home sweet home indeed. 

A prime Prospect Park-facing townhouse has hit the market, and it serves up a true treat with a cherry on top.

“Among the many unique highlights of this prewar gem is an incredible 1950s-inspired ice cream parlor with tin ceiling and old-fashion-style seating on the garden level,” describes 21 Prospect Park West’s listing, held by Douglas Elliman’s Michelle Griffith and Tricia Tucker. It asks $9.95 million for sale.  

The standout amenity has a black and white-checkered floor, turquoise-cushioned high top bar stools with a chic booth to match, a baby pink counter and door, a nostalgically styled fridge and microwave, beer taps — and plenty of overhead cabinet space. 

“This is the quintessential Brooklyn brownstone with a twist; its very own ice cream parlor, making it very popular for anyone with a sweet tooth!” Griffith told The Post.

“My wife sent me this Zillow listing and said ‘Just scroll,’” wrote author Jason Diamond in a viral tweet about the house. “I’m glad I did because the big reveal makes me think this home really is worth nine million.”

An unexpected retro delight. Courtesy Evan Joseph
A double-height gallery on the first floor. Courtesy Evan Joseph
A balcony wraps the second floor. Courtesy Evan Joseph
The home measures 7,500 square feet. Courtesy Evan Joseph
Two internal staircases provide access to all five floors. Courtesy Evan Joseph
A bay-windowed breakfast nook. Courtesy Evan Joseph
The home has six bedrooms. Courtesy Evan Joseph
A library with built-in bookshelves. Courtesy Evan Joseph
One of the home’s bathrooms. Courtesy Evan Joseph
There is an abundance of original woodwork throughout. Courtesy Evan Joseph
The home’s facade. Courtesy Evan Joseph

Besides the ice cream parlor, the nearly 25-foot-wide townhouse is an absolute stunner. 

Built in 1901, the Renaissance Revival-style property measures 7,500 square feet and features an elegantly restored interior. 

There are six bedrooms and six fireplaces — not to mention wood-trimmed windows, intricate moldings and original woodwork throughout. On the parlor floor there’s a foyer, a living room, a powder room, a dining room, a kitchen and a bay-windowed breakfast nook. A double-height central gallery on the first floor is topped by a turn-of-the-century chandelier — the floor below visible from a balcony that wraps the second floor.

The second story has a wood-paneled library with a Juliet balcony overlooking Prospect Park, as well as a rear terrace. The third-floor primary bedroom has its own sitting room and an ensuite bath with a dual vanity. The top floor has three bedrooms, one bath, a storage room and a snack bar-equipped screening room — if the ice cream parlor wasn’t sweet enough. 

All five floors are accessible via two internal staircases.

As for outdoor space, there’s a stoop, a private backyard — and of course the easily accessible Prospect Park just across the street.