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a huge nyc zoning changes city council vote today — 💥🎉

 

 

 

 

Here's what NYC developers could actually build through Mayor Adams' new housing plan

 

By David Brand

Published Dec 4, 2024

 

 

Mayor Eric Adams’ City of Yes plan to add more housing across the city is up for a final vote in the City Council on Thursday. His proposal would specifically revamp citywide land use rules for the first time in more than six decades to permit bigger buildings and more homes. The regulations, which are known as the zoning code, determine exactly what a property owner can build on a plot of land — whether it’s a modest apartment complex, a soaring skyscraper or a row of warehouses.

 

 

more:

https://gothamist.com/news/heres-what-nyc-developers-could-actually-build-through-mayor-adams-new-housing-plan

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  • VintageLife
    VintageLife

    This building is an absolute beauty!   181 MacDougal Street Nears Completion In Greenwich Village, Manhattan    

  • a throwback  to 1919 --   delancey street and the williamsburgh bridge in full swing during the streetcar era --    

  • the brooklyn tower -- from tuesday before we went to the cavs/nets game at barclays        

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  • Author

approved!  🎅

 

 

 

NYC Council approves $5 billion housing plan backed by Mayor Adams

 

 

In the end, the City Council said “Yes” to Mayor Eric Adams’ plan to permit tens of thousands of new homes across the five boroughs.

 

Councilmembers voted 31-20 on Thursday to approve changes to a thicket of zoning restrictions that limit the size of new development in every neighborhood in the city. Adams dubbed the proposal “City of Yes” — as in “Yes In My Backyard” — and said the changes will allow for the construction of more than 80,000 new homes over the next 15 years.

 

The revisions will affect every section of the city, from suburban Staten Island to the office canyons of Midtown. The plan will allow some property owners to add an extra apartment or small home on their lots, ease the conversion of empty offices into condos and permit developers to construct bigger buildings near subway stations.

 

The plan could put a dent in New York City’s deep housing shortage. A survey conducted last year by the city’s housing agency found just 1.4% of the city’s roughly 2.3 million apartments were vacant and available to rent. For apartments priced under $2,400, the vacancy rate was less than 1%.

 

 

more:

https://gothamist.com/news/mayor-adams-5-billion-housing-plan-to-reshape-nyc-approved-by-city-council

  • Author

former bushwick brewery complex to be redeveloped for mixed use —

 

 

 

Brewing change: Historic William Ulmer Brewery in Bushwick to become mixed-use residential and retail space

 

By Anna Bradley-SmithPosted on December 11, 2024

 

 

The historic William Ulmer Brewery in Bushwick is set to trade hops for housing.

 

The landmarked 19th-century Rundbogenstil Romanesque revival building at 73-81 Beaver Street and 35-47 Belvidere Street will be converted from an industrial complex into a mixed commercial and residential one with 34 rental apartments as part of an upcoming adaptive reuse project.

 

 

more:

https://www.brooklynpaper.com/bushwick-william-ulmer-brewery/

 

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The 19th-century brewery will have ground floor commercial space and four floors of residential rental units. Photo by Susan De Vries

 

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Renderings via DXA Studio

 

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RAMSA’s 255 East 77th Street Rises Steadily On Manhattan’s Upper East Side

 

At number 20 on our year-end countdown of the tallest buildings under construction in New York is 255 East 77th Street, a 500-foot-tall residential skyscraper in the Lenox Hill section of Manhattan’s Upper East Side. Designed by Robert A. M. Stern Architects with Hill West Architects as the architect of record and developed by Naftali Group, the 36-story structure will span 170,481 square feet and yield 62 condominium units in two- to five-bedrooms layouts, as well as 3,861 square feet of retail space, two cellar levels, and 33 enclosed parking spaces. The property is alternately addressed as 1481 Second Avenue and located at the corner of Second Avenue and East 77th Street.

 

Work is also quickly moving along on the installation of the limestone façade and floor-to-ceiling windows, which already enclose much of the podium and are beginning to rise up the main eastern elevation of the tower.



 

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  • Author

we close out the year with a symbolic capper on the hipster era. the williamsburg crest hardware art displays in the early 1990s were the official start of the modern hipster era, so i suppose this must be the end. its being torn down for an apt building. 

 

the shows were originally organized by dayton’s own bill harding aka the grass suit guy, who funny enough went to school with and is friend’s with my spouse’s older brother. you can read about it below —

 

He was the organizer of the infamous Crest Hardware Store shows at an old-timey hardware store in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, just before that neighborhood became the poster child for art world gentrification. Over 100 artists would participate in the Crest Hardware Store shows, where works were installed among the merchandise and sold by the pound.

 

In the following charming video of the second Crest Hardware Store show in 1994, Manny Franquinha, the owner of the store, chuckles and says, “I guess we’re part of a new art colony in Williamsburg.” (The show ran for seven years, then went on hiatus when Pool moved away from New York, only to be revived by Franquinha’s son Joe in 2013.):

 

https://glasstire.com/2019/02/02/this-and-that-grass/

 

 

 

current crest pix —

 

 

Crest Hardware in Williamsburg to make way for 75 new apartments, 11-story tower after $22M sale

 

By Anna Bradley-SmithPosted on December 20, 2024

 

more:

https://www.brooklynpaper.com/crest-hardware-apartments-tower-sale/

 

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The iconic Crest Hardware storefront in Williamsburg, pictured in July 2024, before its closure and the sale of the property for redevelopment. Photo by Susan De Vries

 

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gene pool in the ‘burg

 

 

 

 

  • Author

no affirmation tower for hudson yards, but still a huge 2 tower development on a state controlled land plot unveiled --

 

 

 

 

Development Team Announced For $1.35 Billion Mixed-Use Project At 418 Eleventh Avenue In Hudson Yards, Manhattan

 

BY: MAX GILLESPIE 7:30 AM ON DECEMBER 21, 2024

 

 

Governor Kathy Hochul has selected the Hudson Boulevard Collective to construct HDSN (pronounced “Hudson”), a $1.35 billion two-tower complex at 418 Eleventh Avenue in Hudson Yards, Manhattan. The Collective, which is composed of BRP Companies, BXP, The Moinian Group, and Urbane Development, will lead the transformation of an underdeveloped plot known as Site K, which spans a full block between West 35th and 36th Streets along Eleventh Avenue, directly across from the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center.

 

HDSN’s east tower is anticipated to stand 72 stories and yield 1,349 residential units, including 404 permanently affordable homes. Its west tower will stand 28 stories tall and operate as a 455-room hotel. Notably, the project is set to become the first in New York City with a residential floor area ratio above 12.0 in more than 60 years, thanks to Governor Hochul’s housing reforms enacted in the FY 2025 budget.

 

https://newyorkyimby.com/2024/12/development-team-announced-for-1-35-billion-mixed-use-project-at-418-eleventh-avenue-in-hudson-yards-manhattan.html

 

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Rendering of East Tower at HDSN, via ny.gov

 

 

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  • Author

also -- a 1M sqft+ office building is on the way for hudson yards  --

 

 

 

 

Renderings Revealed For 47-Story Skyscraper At 70 Hudson Yards In Hudson Yards, Manhattan

 

 

...

Floor plates at 70 Hudson Yards are expected to span around 30,000 square feet and cost around $200 per square foot. Office amenities will include a lounge and conferencing and wellness spaces, and the ground floor is planned to include dining and retail.

 

https://newyorkyimby.com/2024/12/renderings-revealed-for-47-story-skyscraper-at-70-hudson-yards-in-hudson-yards-manhattan.html

 

 

 

 

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70 Hudson Yards. Designed by Roger Ferris + Partners and Gensler.

 

9 hours ago, mrnyc said:

also -- a 1M sqft+ office building is on the way for hudson yards  --

 

 

 

 

Renderings Revealed For 47-Story Skyscraper At 70 Hudson Yards In Hudson Yards, Manhattan

 

 

...

Floor plates at 70 Hudson Yards are expected to span around 30,000 square feet and cost around $200 per square foot. Office amenities will include a lounge and conferencing and wellness spaces, and the ground floor is planned to include dining and retail.

 

https://newyorkyimby.com/2024/12/renderings-revealed-for-47-story-skyscraper-at-70-hudson-yards-in-hudson-yards-manhattan.html

 

 

 

 

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70 Hudson Yards. Designed by Roger Ferris + Partners and Gensler.

 

What does the office market look like in New York? Do these massive office buildings rent out, and the older outdated office buildings sit empty? 

Storefront/retail vacancies was 11% in November. 14.7% in Manhattan specifically. 

 

Commercial vacancies was 23.6% as of second quarter. 

 

I don't think these properties include those off-market/not listed.

  • Author
13 hours ago, VintageLife said:

What does the office market look like in New York? Do these massive office buildings rent out, and the older outdated office buildings sit empty? 

 

by all accounts its booming for any new class A office space. older class B and C are not sitting empty, but are struggling. there are office conversions to residential, but not at a relative cleveland rate. 

 

i don’t think we have hit the peak of people coming back to the office yet either, but of course thats hard to say.

 

NYC survived the 70s, 9/11, and 2008.

 

It will be fine even with COVID's ramifications.

I would think like Europe, NYC's residential density helps the office market.  In a city where many residents live in small apartments, you want to get out of the house and go somewhere for the day to work.  

That's a good point. 1.7 million people live in 23 square miles in Manhattan. I'd go nuts being remote for years, especially since my commute would be negligible. 

  • Author
6 minutes ago, TBideon said:

That's a good point. 1.7 million people live in 23 square miles in Manhattan. I'd go nuts being remote for years, especially since my commute would be negligible. 

 

yep thats not the deal. we lived near my spouses office and she often went in during the pandemic. she was literally the only employee in the building other than building staff. this is a full block building 1.1M sq ft of offices. it was surreal. they are all back in the building now most of the week. i think thats how its going to be for most.

You want to get up and move around during the day doing WFH. For the same money out in you-gotta-drive-everywhere land you get a whole house to move around in -- maybe you even have a gym and a pool.

  • Author

also with the local business focus of nyc like media, banking and the like you need collaborative face to face time, so that helps to rope people back.  it will never be what it was of course, because even with those jobs you can do them wfh at least part of the week.

  • 2 weeks later...
  • Author

lol the southbridge community next door is going to pitch a fit about that. they were already successful in getting the currently u/c howard hughes site development along pearl street in the seaport downsized. i hope it gets built though.

  • Author

i am excited about this one because charity and also i used to walk by the site often after work. its was a former monastery turned shelter in highbridge in the bx. it will have an awesome amenity — the high bridge.

 

 

 

New renderings unveiled for upcoming 31-story residential building in Highbridge

 

By Ethan MarshallPosted on January 29, 2025

 

The building is expected to span 333,508 square feet, with 422 total residential units. The development will feature a mix of housing options, including 125 affordable units, 190 supportive housing units, 106 transitional units for families, and a residence for the building’s superintendent. In total, 60% of the 422 units will be designated for formerly homeless families and individuals.

 

 

lots of renders:

https://www.bxtimes.com/renderings-31-story-residential-highbridge/

 

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Renderings courtesy of Magnusson Architecture and Planning PC.

 

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1387 University Ave. in Highbridge.

I know this is probably a weird idea, but as the Bronx continues to revive I wonder if they can build a few more bridges across the Harlem River and turn it into a mini Seine or Thames.

  • Author

our wasted rooftops — more of this kind of thing everywhere please — 🎉

 

 

 

 

Solar panels on Staten Island shopping center electrifying 140 homes

 

Published: Feb. 03, 2025

By Jillian Delaney | [email protected]

 

 

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — For the last six months, a Graniteville rooftop has been generating clean energy to 140 homes.

 

The Expressway Plaza, which houses a popular Stop & Shop, is a part of the UGE company’s series of “community solar projects” around New York City.

 

 

more:

https://www.silive.com/news/2025/01/solar-panels-on-staten-island-shopping-center-electrifying-140-homes.html

 

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Solar panels on the Expressway Plaza are generating electricity for 140 homes. (Courtesy of UGE)Courtesy of UGE

 

 

 

Edited by mrnyc

  • Author

also along those lines … 🎉

 

 

 

 

505 State Street Becomes First Residential Development In New York City To Be Fully Powered By Off-Site Solar Energy

 

BY: MAX GILLESPIE 7:00 AM ON FEBRUARY 3, 2025

 

 

505 State Street, a 44-story residential tower in Downtown Brooklyn, recently became the first residential development in New York City to be fully powered by off-site solar power.

 

Designed and developed by Alloy, the 482-foot-tall tower yields 441 rental apartments, including 45 affordable units, and is part of the broader Alloy Block mixed-use project integrating residential, office, and retail spaces.

 

The tower will be powered by 100 percent renewable energy through two newly announced community solar agreements with Radial Power and MaxSolar. Through these 25-year agreements, the building will receive 900 kilowatts from Radial Power’s rooftop solar array at Gateway Mall in Brooklyn and up to 2.4 megawatts from MaxSolar’s Old Mill project in Yorktown, New York. This approach complies with Local Law 97, allowing developers to use community solar programs to meet emission reduction goals.

 

 

more:

https://newyorkyimby.com/2025/02/505-state-street-becomes-first-residential-development-in-new-york-city-to-be-fully-powered-by-off-site-solar-energy.html

 

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Photograph of 505 State Street in Downtown Brooklyn. Credit: Pavel Bendov

 

 

  • Author

a stern development for nr — 🎉

 

 

 

 

Site Plan Approval Issued For Pratt Landing In New Rochelle

 

BY: MAX GILLESPIE 7:30 AM ON JANUARY 31, 2025

 

 

Site plan approval has been granted for Pratt Landing, a mixed-use waterfront development in New Rochelle located along the Long Island Sound. Developed in a collaborative effort between Twining Properties, the City of New Rochelle, and the State of New York, the project will convert a former industrial brownfield into a community hub with over 300 residential units and 99 condominiums. Project work will include the restoration of the historic New Rochelle Naval Armory, which when restored will feature housing reserved for veterans. Construction on the project is scheduled to commence in 2026 and is expected to complete in 2029.

 

 

more:

https://newyorkyimby.com/2025/01/site-plan-approval-issued-for-pratt-landing-in-new-rochelle.html

 

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Rendering of Pratt Landing. Designed by Robert A.M. Stern Architects

 

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Rendering of retail space at Pratt Landing. Designed by Robert A.M. Stern Architects

 

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Rendering of waterfront at Pratt Landing. Designed by Robert A.M. Stern Architects

 

 

From the renderings it looks more like something from Netherlands or Germany than typical NYC area.

  • Author

also a few blocks from the chase tower it was announced the 1586’ citadel 350 park tower is a go — ulurp this year and demo next year — 🎉

 

 

 

Ken Griffin’s New Manhattan Tower Nears Public-Review Process

 

Griffin, developers are seeking to build a 62-story skyscraper

 

Public review of the project is expected to start in March

 

By Natalie Wong

February 4, 2025

 

 

Citadel’s Ken Griffin is forging ahead with his new Park Avenue office tower, filing plans with the city as the developers gear up for a public review of the project starting in March.

 

Griffin and developers Vornado Realty Trust and Rudin submitted an official application last week for their 62-story office tower in New York City. The building will be an all-electric tower that’s expected to house 6,000 workers. 

 

“We are excited to move forward with the development of an iconic tower that will provide world-class office space for our colleagues and reshape both Park Avenue and the Manhattan skyline for decades to come,” a Citadel spokesperson said.

 

The tower, designed by Foster + Partners, is expected to be completed by 2032. According to the filing, the building will include roughly 1.5 million square feet (139,000 square meters) of commercial space largely for office and trading use, with nearly 17,000 square feet of ground-floor retail that is expected to be used for food spots. There will also be a public concourse.

 

 

more:

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-02-04/ken-griffin-s-new-manhattan-tower-nears-public-review-process

 

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A rendering of 350 Park Ave.Source: Foster + Partners

 

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  • Author

a film clip of lower broadway in 1902 -- colorized and restored --

 

 

 

35 minutes ago, mrnyc said:

a film clip of lower broadway in 1902 -- colorized and restored --

 

 

 

I don't know about everyone else, but I love this stuff.   It's sort of haunting knowing these people have lived their lives and are long gone.   A blip in time...

4 hours ago, Cleburger said:

I don't know about everyone else, but I love this stuff.   It's sort of haunting knowing these people have lived their lives and are long gone.   A blip in time...

 

Look up in the sky at night sometime.  We're living in a graveyard, surrounded by death.  DEATH.

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

  • Author

squeezing one in here — a new apparrantly value engineered render was posted on the construction board that differs from previous version — design still by oda i think —

 

 

 

 

Revised Rendering Revealed For 303 East 44th Street In Midtown East, Manhattan

 

 

https://newyorkyimby.com/2025/02/revised-rendering-revealed-for-303-east-44th-street-in-midtown-east-manhattan.html

 

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Photo by Michael Young/nyy

 

 

previous —

 

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via oda

 

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via oda

Replacing a mall with an expanded downtown White Plains one block from Metro North. Amid a public park will be 3,200 housing units, of which 400 will be affordable.

 

https://districtgalleria.com/

 

 

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"In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck

  • Author

its not all bad with the mayor —

 

 

 

New York City Achieves Back-To-Back Record-Setting Years For Affordable Housing Creation

 

BY: MAX GILLESPIE 7:30 AM ON FEBRUARY 14, 2025

 

 

New York City has set a new record for affordable housing creation for the second consecutive year. Mayor Eric Adams announced that in 2024, the city built the highest number of units for formerly homeless individuals (4,623), supportive housing (2,761), and senior housing (2,966) in its history. The city also closed financing for 27,620 affordable homes and facilitated nearly 14,654 households moving into affordable units.

 

A key driver of these records is the city’s investment in public housing and rental assistance programs. In 2024, NYCHA converted 3,887 apartments to Project-Based Section 8, securing $1.7 billion in capital repairs. The administration also strengthened access to CityFHEPS vouchers, leading to a 40 percent increase in shelter exits using city-funded rental assistance. Additionally, Mayor Adams introduced the “Manhattan Plan” to add 100,000 new homes over the next decade and allocated $82 million to expand homeownership opportunities through the HomeFirst Down Payment Assistance Program.

 

 

more:

https://newyorkyimby.com/2025/02/new-york-city-achieves-back-to-back-record-setting-years-for-affordable-housing-creation.html

  • Author

another one for downtown brooklyn —

 

 

 

63-Story Skyscraper Revealed For Second Phase Of Alloy Block In Downtown Brooklyn

 

BY: MICHAEL YOUNG AND MATT PRUZNICK 8:00 AM ON FEBRUARY 19, 2025

 

 

Alloy Development has revealed new renderings for One Third Avenue, a 63-story skyscraper in the second phase of the Alloy Block complex in Downtown Brooklyn. The 725-foot-tall structure will rise to the northwest of the completed 44-story Alloy Block tower at 505 State Street and will secure the title of the tallest Passive House-engineered building in the world. The building will yield 583 market-rate and affordable housing units, retail space, and commercial office space.

 

 

more:

https://newyorkyimby.com/2025/02/63-story-skyscraper-revealed-for-second-phase-of-alloy-block-in-downtown-brooklyn.html

 

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Renderings courtesy of Alloy Development.

 

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13 hours ago, mrnyc said:

the history of downzoning in queens in 1961 and upzoning again more recently —

 

 

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DGPAszINJdc/?igsh=bnRpNjU3cWs0azAz

I live in Jackson Heights and reviewed the neighborhood zoning in depth when I bought my place 6ish years ago. My building, along with basically every other co-op/apartment building in the neighborhood, are overbuilt by current zoning.

 

Then, way more annoyingly in my mind, Northern Blvd is zoned in such a way that basically none of it allows for more than one or two stories to be built. There's zero reason in my mind that a major thoroughfare through a neighborhood of over 100,000 people should be zoned for things like one story commercial buildings with surface parking. I want Northern to be upzoned in a similar manner to 4th Ave in Brooklyn a couple decades ago. There's so much potential to turn it into a way denser corridor all the way from LIC out to Willets Point with easy access to tons of bus routes, nearby trains, etc. Then I'd encourage them to build a subway under it out to Flushing (wishful thinking, I know haha).

  • Author

yes northern is a prime example of a corridor that needs re-upzoned.

 

they did it here in staten along bay street/richmond terrace. thats the northernmost street all along the waterfront. they now are in the process of upgrading utilities, like new sewer lines. i expect we’ll have at least some of the dense development they planned for follow in time. 

 

edit — plans for the brooklyn atlantic avenue corridor, which currently is a huge mess of a car sewer —

 

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DGDeQWmOdOm/?igsh=cWl3bmhidjNzMG55

 

 

Edited by mrnyc

  • Author

and ... housing??

 

 

 

City and state select team to transform historic Kingsbridge Armory into community hub with 450 affordable homes


By Aaron Ginsburg
January 8, 2025

...

City and state officials announced Tuesday the development team that will redevelop the century-old Kingsbridge Armory as an event space, sports field, cultural center, and 450 new affordable homes. Developed by 8th Regiment Partners LLC, a joint venture between real estate firm Maddd Equities LLC and Joy Construction, the project, dubbed El Centro Kingsbridge, is scheduled for completion in 2032.

 

...

Designed by architect Lewis Pilcher in 1917, the Kingsbridge Armory has more than 570,000 square feet of floor space, making it the world’s largest armory. The property was used by the U.S. military until 1994 and the city took over ownership of the building in 1996.

 

...

The project is expected to generate almost $2.6 billion in economic impact over the next three decades while creating more than 3,000 construction jobs and 360 permanent jobs.

An environmental review is slated to begin this winter, and the uniform land-use review procedure is expected to commence in mid-2025.

Construction is expected to start in 2027 and finish by 2032, as first reported by The City.

 

more:

https://www.6sqft.com/city-selects-team-to-transform-historic-kingsbridge-armory-into-community-hub-with-affordable-homes/

 

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I'm cool with the casino going there as long as it doesn't eat away at the amusement park stuff. Coney Island is such a unique asset for a city to have and while the general quality of what Zamperla has added is barely a step above a carnival, it's still a fun time and would be a problem if replaced with a casino, which are obviously notorious for being fortresses no matter how glitzy the renderings make them out to look.

 

That all said, I do like the look of that development to the west of the ballpark. That stretch is very quiet right now and would be great to have more commercial space fronting the boardwalk.

  • Author

a couple more for lic --

 

 

 

 

44-Story Skyscraper Revealed For 42-50 24th Street In Long Island City, Queens

 

https://newyorkyimby.com/2025/02/44-story-skyscraper-revealed-for-42-50-24th-street-in-long-island-city-queens.html

 

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Renderings Revealed For The Cube At 42-53 24th Street In Long Island City, Queens.

 

https://newyorkyimby.com/2025/02/renderings-revealed-for-the-cube-at-42-53-24th-street-in-long-island-city-queens.html

 

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^Yonkers Schmonkers! Ages ago I nearly got lost looking for the Hudson River Museum to see a friend's artwork on display. I got off the train and had to walk through some dicey neighborhoods. Didn't know if I would make it back alive lol Looks like the city is improving, if you see gentrification as improvement. Such a great song—leaving Yonkers (sorry to stray off topic)

 

  • Author

interesting!

 

 

 

Work Continues On 100 South 9th Street In Williamsburg, Brooklyn

 

BY: MICHAEL YOUNG AND MATT PRUZNICK 7:30 AM ON FEBRUARY 25, 2025

 

 

Exterior work is progressing on 100 South 9th Street, a six-story residential building in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Designed by Archimaera Architecture for Michael Weitzman of Spearhead Contracting, the 32,999-square-foot project involves the partial demolition and repurposing of the Epiphany RC Church and will yield 45 rental units with an average scope of 733 square feet. The development will also include a 15-foot-long rear yard and seven enclosed parking spots in the cellar level. The property is located between South 9th and 10th Streets.

 

https://newyorkyimby.com/2025/02/work-continues-on-100-south-9th-street-in-williamsburg-brooklyn.html

 

 

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Photo by Michael Young/nyy

 

 

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via google maps

 

 

10 minutes ago, mrnyc said:

interesting!

 

 

 

Work Continues On 100 South 9th Street In Williamsburg, Brooklyn

 

BY: MICHAEL YOUNG AND MATT PRUZNICK 7:30 AM ON FEBRUARY 25, 2025

 

 

Exterior work is progressing on 100 South 9th Street, a six-story residential building in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Designed by Archimaera Architecture for Michael Weitzman of Spearhead Contracting, the 32,999-square-foot project involves the partial demolition and repurposing of the Epiphany RC Church and will yield 45 rental units with an average scope of 733 square feet. The development will also include a 15-foot-long rear yard and seven enclosed parking spots in the cellar level. The property is located between South 9th and 10th Streets.

 

https://newyorkyimby.com/2025/02/work-continues-on-100-south-9th-street-in-williamsburg-brooklyn.html

 

 

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Photo by Michael Young/nyy

 

 

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via google maps

 

 

That thing is beautiful 

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