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Historic East Village synagogue on sale as a $2.5 million home

Emily Rahhal
2 min read

EAST VILLAGE, Manhattan (PIX11) – A synagogue built in the East Village in 1841 and landmarked a century later is now on the market as a $2.5 million home.

The three-bedroom property, which sits on the upper level of the three-unit building on Sixth Street near First Avenue, maintains its original limestone facade and stained glass windows, according to the Compass listing.

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The building was landmarked as part of the East Village Historic District, a grouping of about 325 buildings built in the 19th and 20th centuries along Second Avenue between East Second Street and East Seventh Street. It was built in 1841 as a home but altered in 1910 to serve as a synagogue, according to the Landmarks Preservation Commission.

Outside, the building boasts round-arched windows with stained glass, iron fencing, engraved Hebrew lettering, and double-metal entry doors.

Inside, the renovated 1,700-square-foot home has oak flooring, marble countertops, and an in-unit washer and dryer. A private elevator brings residents up to the open upper unit, which was last sold in 2018 for $1.9 million, according to the Compass listing.

In 2023, part of another converted synagogue, once home to a Polish or Ukrainian social club and the long-term home to a slew of artists, was listed on Sixth Street, according to Curbed. One two-bedroom unit in the building was valued at $1.6 million and another at $2.25 million.

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The synagogue was once home to an orthodox Jewish congregation named after a town in Poland. It’s a marker of the influx of Yiddish-speaking Eastern European Jewish immigration to the Lowe East Side in the late 19th and 20th centuries, according to the LPC.

Nearby sits a Protestant Hungarian house of worship, and the architecture of 415 East Sixth St. is indicative of similar religious buildings in the neighborhood.

“The building is a notable example of the ‘tenement synagogue’ typology — small religious buildings that fit into the typical 25-foot wide residential lot — which were erected throughout the neighborhood,” LPC researchers wrote in the historic district’s 2012 report.

Emily Rahhal is a digital reporter from Los Angeles who has covered New York City since 2023. She joined PIX11 in 2024. See more of her work here and follow her on Twitter here.

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