Real Estate
Here's How Many Park Slopers Left NYC During The Pandemic: Report
The neighborhood is one of only two non-Manhattan spots on a list of where the most New Yorkers left between March and October.

PARK SLOPE, BROOKLYN — More Brooklynites fled from Park Slope than almost any other neighborhood in the borough during the coronavirus pandemic, new numbers show.
Park Slope's 11215 was one of only two non-Manhattan ZIP codes that made a list of the top spots where New Yorkers exited between March and October, according to change of address data requests obtained by The New York Post.
Just over 1,000 households in Park Slope left the city during that time, the numbers show.
Find out what's happening in Park Slopefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Only Downtown Brooklyn, where about 1,800 households asked for a change of address, surpassed Park Slope for outer borough spots with a mass exodus.
The rest of the top 20 ZIP codes were in Manhattan.
Find out what's happening in Park Slopefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
In all, the outlet estimated that more than 300,000 people left New York City during the pandemic, many heading for tri-state area towns in Long Island, Westchester, New Jersey or Connecticut.
Here's ZIP codes that saw the most New Yorkers leave between March 1 and Oct. 31, 2020:
1. Upper West Side, 10023: 3,368
2. Upper West Side, 10025: 3,000
3. Murray Hill, 10016: 2,889
4. Upper West Side, 10024: 2,708
5. Chelsea/Greenwich Village, 10011: 2,520
6. Upper East Side, 10128: 2,165
7. Downtown Brooklyn, 11201: 1,836
8. Gramercy/East Village, 10003: 1,677
9. Upper East Side, 10028: 1,631
10. Midtown East, 10022: 1,410
11. Midtown West, 10019: 1,484
12. Upper East Side, 10021: 1,506
13. Chelsea, 10001: 1,222
14. West Village, 10014: 1,192
15. Park Slope, Brooklyn, 11215: 1,006
16. Rose Hill/Peter Cooper Village, 10010: 1,002
17. Midtown, 10018: 987
18. Tribeca/Chinatown, 10013: 899
19. Midtown, 10036: 837
20. East Village, 10009: 728
You can see the full list of top 20 ZIP codes and read the entire article on the NY Post website.
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