Eagles Nest is a small, seven-unit condominium complex on Taylor Street in Norwalk. With only seven units total, turnover here is infrequent. When a unit becomes available, it tends to move without much time on the market. No active listings are verified at the time of this writing. If you are watching this building, availability changes quickly and waiting for a public listing often means missing it. Contact The Engel Team at Douglas Elliman directly to monitor Eagles Nest for off-market availability and to be positioned before a unit hits the public Norwalk homes for sale feed.
MLS records show one verified sale at Eagles Nest. Unit C closed on June 15, 2018, at $165,000. That unit was a one-bedroom, one-bath flat measuring 819 square feet, which puts the price per square foot at approximately $201. That is the only closed transaction in the MLS record for this complex.
| Unit | Date | Price | Bed/Bath | SqFt | HOA/mo | Tax/yr |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C | 06/15/2018 | $165,000 | 1/1 | 819 | $188 | $3,056 |
One transaction is a thin data set. It establishes a baseline price point, but it does not give a buyer the kind of comp depth you would have in a larger building. The Norwalk condo market has shifted since 2018, and a building with seven units and one recorded sale will require careful comparable analysis pulling from similar small-scale complexes nearby. Any offer or listing price strategy here needs to account for that gap.
Eagles Nest sits at 6 Taylor Street in Norwalk, a small residential address that reflects the mixed-era character of Norwalk’s older neighborhoods. The building carries a construction range of 1885 to 1987, meaning the original structure dates to the late nineteenth century, with significant work or additions completed through the 1980s. That span is not unusual for Norwalk, where older building stock was frequently converted or expanded over decades. The complex contains seven units total, making it one of the smaller condominium associations in the city. At that scale, the association functions more like a small cooperative community than a professionally managed mid-rise. Decisions happen at the owner level, assessments are spread across a small pool, and the dynamic between neighbors matters more than it would in a 50-unit building.
Eagles Nest offers one- and two-bedroom units in a ranch-style configuration. The one-bedroom unit in the verified MLS record came in at 819 square feet with one bathroom. Ranch-style construction at this address means single-level living without stairs between floors, which appeals to buyers who want straightforward accessibility without a townhouse-style vertical layout. Parking and outdoor space details are not verified in available data and should be confirmed directly with the listing agent or the association. Given the small unit count and the era of construction, unit conditions are likely to vary meaningfully between individual homes. Renovation quality, kitchen and bath updates, and mechanical systems will differ from unit to unit and should be evaluated on a per-unit basis rather than assumed from the building’s general profile.
The HOA fee at Eagles Nest is $188 per month. At that level, the fee is modest relative to many Norwalk CT condos, but it also reflects the small association size. Seven units sharing reserve contributions means the reserve fund accumulates slowly. For a building with a structural history going back to 1885, that is a meaningful consideration. Buyers should request the full reserve study before making an offer. Ask specifically what percentage of the recommended reserve is currently funded, and whether any special assessments have been levied in the past five years or are currently under discussion.
Property taxes for the verified sale unit ran $3,056 annually. That figure is well below the Norwalk median, consistent with the building’s price point. Buyers financing the purchase should confirm the current assessed value, as tax figures can shift after a transfer.
Because the building dates partially to 1885, buyers should pay particular attention to building systems: roof age and condition, plumbing type, electrical panels, and HVAC. In a seven-unit association, a major repair to shared systems can result in a significant per-unit assessment with limited ability to spread the cost. A professional inspection and a review of the association’s maintenance history are not optional steps at a building this age.
Resale potential at Eagles Nest is tied directly to unit condition and comparable sales in the surrounding area. With only one recorded MLS transaction, the resale package that an attorney or buyer’s agent assembles will need to lean on nearby comparables from similar small-scale buildings in Norwalk rather than internal sales history. Buyers purchasing here should understand that thin comp history can create pricing uncertainty in both directions at resale. Rental rules, pet policy, and owner-occupancy ratio are not verified in available data and must be confirmed with the association or its management contact before closing.
Insurance structure in a small association like this typically involves a master policy covering the building envelope and common areas, with individual unit owners responsible for HO-6 coverage for interior finishes and personal property. Confirm exactly where the master policy coverage ends and where your individual policy needs to begin. That boundary can vary by association documents.
Eagles Nest is a specific building with a specific pricing history, and it requires an agent who understands how to value a unit when internal comps are thin. The Engel Team works the Norwalk condo market closely. If you are a buyer, that means getting access to off-market movement before a unit goes public and knowing how to structure an offer when the comparable data set is limited. If you are a seller, it means building a pricing strategy that accounts for the building’s age, unit condition, and the current state of the Norwalk market, where inventory contracted by more than 10 percent in early 2025 and median prices have come down from recent highs.
Reach out to The Engel Team directly for a current valuation, a review of association documents, or to be notified when a unit at Eagles Nest becomes available. You can also explore the broader Norwalk CT real estate market to understand how this building fits within the city’s wider condominium inventory.
© 2025 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. ALL MATERIAL PRESENTED HEREIN IS INTENDED FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY. WHILE THIS INFORMATION IS BELIEVED TO BE CORRECT, IT IS REPRESENTED SUBJECT TO ERRORS, OMISSIONS, CHANGES OR WITHDRAWAL WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL PROPERTY INFORMATION, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO SQUARE FOOTAGE, ROOM COUNT, NUMBER OF BEDROOMS AND THE SCHOOL DISTRICT IN PROPERTY LISTINGS SHOULD BE VERIFIED BY YOUR OWN ATTORNEY, ARCHITECT OR ZONING EXPERT. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY. 
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