In June, we told you that This Old House was looking for it's first ever New York City project. Well, it looks like they found it — in Brooklyn! We pulled some interior details from This Old House and Gothamist got a peek at the progress...

Oak hall tree:
Hall trees, like this one carved from oak, were extremely popular in the late 19th century. The beautiful full-length mirrors weren't just eye-catching, they were also practical, serving as a spot where one could remove galoshes, hang up an overcoat, and primp before leaving the house. Think of it as the precursor to today's mudroom. The mirrors also served to make rooms and hallways appear larger.
From This Old House:
The side stair placement common to New York City rowhouses was intended to give the rooms as much square footage as possible. Stained-glass skylights, located directly above, illuminated most staircases.

Tiled fireplace surround.
In Progress from Gothamist (Photographs by Katie Sokoler)
The red paint has been stripped to reveal the stone. 

Photos and historical information about the home's period details are here. The brownstone is being transformed into a three-family home, which will contain a duplex for the family on the middle two floors (connected by a spiral staircase they bought on Brownstoner), plus two rental units on the garden and top levels.
Besides the This Old House team which comes to Brooklyn from Boston every week or two, the project is being overseen by Brooklyn contractor Michael R. Streaman, whose own team includes plumbing contractor Erik Gitli from Aladdin Plumbing and Vincent Verderosa, from Super-Charged Electric. In total, there's a crew of almost 30 people working to get the house finished by late February, and the episodes for the Brooklyn project will start airing around on January 22 (check local listings). In the meantime, you can keep track of the brownstone's progress by checking up on posts at Old House, My House as well as the live 24-hour webcams on the site.
More in progress photos from Gothamist

Comments (10)
Um, that's not a "Hall Tree" - It's not even in the hall...
...That's what's known as a "Pier Mirror".
The exterior looks so much better without the red paint. Can't wait to watch the show!
this old house has always been one of my favorite shows, ever since i was a youngun! and i'm a brooklynite! this is the best combo ever! ;)
@bepsf: you're right, pier mirror, not hall tree.
Hey -- Check out the renovationg going on at http://interioritycomplex.typepad.com/
Hm. Shouldn't that last paragraph be in quotations or something? Links are nice and all, but it was lifted word-for-word directly from Gothamist.
"Hm". Tough crowd. Keep up the good work Amy, we loves you.
Just basic blogging/writing etiquette cgonza. Citing sources is part of it, but you have to do your own writing or at least note when you're lifting directly from another blogger. AT strikes me as a fairly professional operation. I'd think they'd adhere to those kind of standards.
I added more information about the "hall tree" above from TOH... Hall tree is their terminology...
Oh, it's not the content of the post that bothered me. With the way things travel on the web these days you can hardly expect that blogs won't cover the same material or have the same pictures. It was that the entire last paragraph of this post was copied almost exactly. Not even paraphrased, just copy/pasted with a couple words changed.