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Cohort 20 Graduation Celebration Ceremony February 7, 2020
COHORT 20 GRADUATION CELEBRATION CEREMONY FEBRUARY 7, 2020 Green City Force is an AmeriCorps program CONGRATULATIONS TO THE GRADUATES OF COHORT 20! WELCOME! Welcome to the graduation celebration for Green City Force’s (GCF) 20th Cohort! Green City Force’s AmeriCorps program prepares young adults, aged 18-24, who reside at NYCHA and have a high school diploma or equivalency for careers through green service. Being part of the Service Corps is a full-time commitment encompass- ing service, training, and skills-building experiences related to sustainable buildings and communities. GCF is committed to the ongoing success of our alumni, who num- ber nearly 550 with today’s graduates. The Corps Members of Cohort 20 represent a set of diverse experiences, hailing from 20 NYCHA developments and five boroughs. This cohort was the largest cohort as- signed to Farms at NYCHA, totaling 50 members for 8 and 6 months terms of service. The Cohort exemplifies our one corps sustainable cities service in response to climate resilience and community cohesion through environmental stewardship, building green infrastructure and urban farming, and resident education at NYCHA. We have a holistic approach to sustainability and pride ourselves in training our corps in a vari- ety of sectors, from composting techniques and energy efficiency to behavior change outreach. Cohort 20 are exemplary leaders of sustainability and have demonstrated they can confidently use the skills they learn to make real contributions to our City. Cohort 20’s service inspired hundreds of more residents this season to be active in their developments and have set a new standard for service that we are proud to have their successors learn from and exceed for even greater impact. -
Second Quarter 2021 Residential Market Report
Cooperatives & Condominiums Second Quarter 2021 Residential Market Report Second Quarter 2021 Residential Market Report Cooperatives & Condominiums Brooklyn BHSID 20845406 Message from Bess Freedman CEO of Brown Harris Stevens Brooklyn apartment prices averaged a record $965,575 in the second quarter, as demand remained incredibly strong. Closings more than doubled compared to a year ago, and were also up 26% from 2021’s first quarter. The number of contracts signed during the second quarter set a new record, so expect the number of closings to rise sharply in 3Q21. I’m also happy to announce we have made two major changes to our Brooklyn quarterly report beginning with this issue. First, instead of reporting on just four major areas, we now have data for 12 neighborhood groupings. This will allow us to present more localized and relevant data to you. Secondly, we are now just reporting on apartments, as townhouses will now have their own semiannual report. BHSID 20873538 BHS 2 Q2 2021 All Brooklyn Brooklyn apartment prices averaged a record $965,575 in the second quarter, which was 10% higher than a year ago. The average condo price per square foot also set a record, crossing the $1,000 mark for All Brooklyn BHSID 20221010 the first time. BHS 3 Q2 2021 All Brooklyn* BHSID 20828157 Cooperatives & Condominiums Average & Median Sales Price $1 ,200 ,0 00 $1,000,000 $965,575 $936,985 $880,729 $874,892 $835,030 $810,000 $792,000 $800,000 $760,000 $700,000 $692,410 $600,000 $400,000 2Q20 3Q20 4Q20 1Q 21 2Q21 Average Price Median Price Cooperative Condominium Average Price Per Room Average Price Per Square Foot $250,000 $1,2 50 $1,008 $200,000 $1,000 $969 $181,808 $162,425 $150,000 $750 $100,000 $500 $50,000 $250 2Q20 2Q21 2Q20 2Q21 * Includes new development and resale apartments. -
Sky-High Landmark District
BROOKLYN’S REAL NEWSPAPERS Including The Brooklyn Heights Paper, Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill Paper, DUMBO Paper, Fort Greene-Clinton Hill Paper and Downtown News Published every Saturday — online all the time — by Brooklyn Paper Publications Inc, 55 Washington St, Suite 624, Brooklyn NY 11201. Phone 718-834-9350 • www.BrooklynPapers.com • © 2005 Brooklyn Paper Publications • 16 pages •Vol.28, No. 10 BWN • Saturday, March 5, 2005 • FREE SKY-HIGH BKLYN STATE SENATOR TO CITY: LANDMARK DISTRICT Heights civics seek to protect buildings near Borough Hall By Jess Wisloski buildings or larger complexes The Brooklyn Papers under the Downtown Brooklyn Rezoning Plan approved last With the help of a preserva- summer. tion group, the Brooklyn “These are very distin- Heights Association is pro- guished commercial buildings moting a plan to preserve sev- built by the best architects of eral high-rise office buildings the day,” said Herrera, technical just outside the Brooklyn services director of the Land- Heights Historic District. marks Conservancy. Herrera Calling it the “Borough Hall said the movement came about Skyscraper Historic District,” after St. Francis College began BHA President Nancy Bowe demolition of the McGarry Li- touted the proposal at her brary last year at 180 Remsen group’s annual meeting last St. month. “Some of them have been The compact district would abused and knocked around, “butt up against” the Brooklyn but they could be restored and Heights Historic District, ac- really bought back to their cording to the proposal’s coor- best,” he said, and called the dinator, BHA governor Alex proposed district a “real history Showtime Herrera, who also works for the lesson” on the days when “the New York Landmarks Conser- best architects in New York vancy. -
February 19, 2019 Agenda
Design Commission Meeting Agenda Tuesday, February 19, 2019 The Committee Meeting is scheduled to begin at 11:00 a.m. Public Meeting 2:15 p.m. Election of Officers 2:30 p.m. Consent Items 26925: Conversion of Building 20 into a light-industrial building, Morris Avenue, Third Street, Dock Avenue, and Fourth Street, Brooklyn Navy Yard Industrial Park, Brooklyn. (Preliminary) (CC 33, CB 2) BNYDC 26926: Installation of rooftop mechanical equipment, Flushing Community Library, 41-17 Main Street, Flushing, Queens. (Preliminary and Final) (CC 20, CB 7) DDC/QL 26927: Construction of three overlook areas and restoration of a wetland, Hylan Boulevard Bluebelt between Seaver Avenue and Stobe Avenue, New Creek watershed, Staten Island. (Final) (CC 50, CB 2) DDC/DEP/DOT 26928: Installation of rooftop mechanical equipment, louvers, and doors, Bellevue Men's Shelter, 400 East 30th Street, Manhattan. (Preliminary) (CC 4, CB 6) DDC/DHS 26929: Rehabilitation of the Bushwick Health Center, 335 Central Avenue, Brooklyn. (Final) (CC 37, CB 4) DDC/DOHMH 26930: Construction of a portion of the Brooklyn Waterfront Greenway (Hamilton Gowanus Connector), Hamilton Avenue and Smith Street to 3rd Avenue and 29th Street, Brooklyn. (Preliminary and Final) (CC 38 & 39, CB 6 & 7) DDC/DOT 26931: Construction of a prototypical planted median, Atlantic Avenue from Logan Street to Rockaway Boulevard, Brooklyn and Queens. (Preliminary and Final) (CC 30, 32, & 37, CB BK5 & Q9) DDC/DOT 26932: Construction of streetscape improvements, Coney Island Hospital, Ocean Parkway between Avenue Z and Belt Parkway, Brooklyn. (Preliminary and Final) (CC 48, CB 13) DDC/DOT 26933: Installation of rooftop mechanical equipment, Queens District 7 Garage, 120-15 31st Avenue, Flushing, Queens. -
Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, NY 11235
Oct. 9–15, 2015 Including Park Slope Courier, Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill Courier, Brooklyn Heights Courier, & Williamsburg Courier FREE SERVING GOWANUS, PARK SLOPE, PROSPECT HEIGHTS, WINDSOR TERRACE, BROOKLYN HEIGHTS, DUMBO, METROTECH, BOERUM HILL, CARROLL GARDENS, COBBLE HILL, RED HOOK, WILLIAMSBURG & GREENPOINT W FREE Delivery, Set-up & Removal PLUS Special Financing PRICE MATCH guarantee Available See Inside For Details. Now Over... 60 In-Store Mattress Galleries NY, NJ, CT, PA New mattress galleries opening daily. Visit pcrichard.com/mattress for details. New mattress galleries opening daily. Visit pcrichard.com/mattress for details. A CNG Publication Vol. 35 No. 41 UPDATED EVERY DAY AT BROOKLYNDAILY.COM * *BY MAIL. SEE STORE FOR DETAILS. UP 6 TO 60 MONTHS SPECIAL FINANCING On Qualifying Mattress Purchases VALID 10/9/15 - 10/15/15 6. ALL SPECIAL FINANCING OFFERS: SUBJECT TO CREDIT APPROVAL. MINIMUM MONTHLY PAYMENTS REQUIRED. 6 MONTHS SPECIAL FINANCING ON PURCHASES OF ALL MATTRESSES UP TO $999, 12 MONTHS ON PU $4,500-$5,999 AND 60 MONTHS ONPURCHASES OF $6,000 OR MORE. EQUAL MONTHLY PAYMENTS REQUIRED FOR 36, 48 OR 60 MONTHS. Oct. 9–15, 2015 Including Park Slope Courier, Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill Courier, Brooklyn Heights Courier, & Williamsburg Courier FREE SERVING GOWANUS, PARK SLOPE, PROSPECT HEIGHTS, WINDSOR TERRACE, BROOKLYN HEIGHTS, DUMBO, METROTECH, BOERUM HILL, CARROLL GARDENS, COBBLE HILL, RED HOOK, WILLIAMSBURG & GREENPOINT Slopers: Revive NEW DUMBO B17 bus! BY COLIN MIXSON Call it a zom-bus! A confederation of civic- SCHOOL FIGHT minded Park Slopers is plot- ting to resurrect a cross-town bus service between the Co- lumbia Street Waterfront Dis- Parents now trict and Crown Heights that the transit authority axed fi ve demanding years ago amidst budget cuts. -
New York City Housing Development Corporation
New York City Housing Development Corporation 2000 Annual Report foundation for the future Building on a record of success by financing quality affordable housing that brings new purpose and vitality to New York City’s neighborhoods. Building on our strong foundation his past fiscal year marked more than just the new millennium for HDC. While the Corporation continued its extraor- dinary record of financial support for affordable housing in New York City, HDC focused both internally and exter- Tnally on laying a foundation for the future. No one can deny that New York City has experienced an extraordinary rebirth over the last seven years. The economy is booming. Crime has been drastically reduced. Tourists from around the country and the world are enjoying the best that New York has to offer. The most important aspect of this metamorphosis, however, is that people want to live in New York City once again, as evidenced by 2000 Census data showing that the population has increased by more than 600,000 since 1996. The private market has aimed to meet the resulting increased demand for housing by constructing and rehabilitating market-rate units in Manhattan. But this increase in supply has not offset increased demand significantly enough to provide low- and middle-income New Yorkers with adequate quantities of viable housing. Furthermore, the private-market-driven housing renaissance has been most apparent in Manhattan and has extended only slowly to communities in Upper Manhattan and the other boroughs. These neighborhoods have for some time contained not only large volumes of vacant, often grand buildings, but also a majority of the population that most desperately needs quality affordable housing. -
State of the Region: New York City
State of the Region: New York City 2015 PROGRESS REPORT NEW YORK CITY REGIONAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL MEMBERS Regional Council Chair Winston Fisher, Partner, Fisher Brothers APPOINTED MEMBERS Stuart Appelbaum, President, RWDSU and Executive Vice President, UFCWIU Wellington Chen, Executive Director of the Chinatown Partnership Marlene Cintron, President, Bronx Overall Economic Development Corporation (BOEDC) Cesar J. Claro, President & CEO, Staten Island Economic Development Corporation Carol Conslato, Past President / Counsel, Queens Chamber of Commerce Mike Fishman, Secretary-Treasurer, SEIU Martin Golden, NYS Senate Monique Greenwood, CEO of Akwaabe Bed & Breakfast Inns Gail Grimmett, Senior Vice President for New York, Delta Airlines Steve Hindy, Founder and Chairman of the Board, Brooklyn Brewery Dr. Marcia V. Keizs, President, York College Kenneth J. Knuckles, President & CEO, Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone Development Corporation Gary LaBarbera, President, Building and Construction Trades Council of Greater New York Nick Lugo, President, New York City Hispanic Chamber of Commerce Ashok Nigalaye, Ph.D, President & CEO, Epic Pharma LLC. Sheldon Silver, NYS Assembly Douglas C. Steiner, Chairman, Steiner Studios Marcel Van Ooyen, Executive Director, Grow NYC Peter Ward, President, New York Hotel and Motel Trades Council Sheena Wright, President & CEO, United Way of New York City Kathryn Wylde, President & CEO, Partnership for New York City EX-OFFICIO MEMBERS Deputy Mayor of New York City, Alicia Glen Bronx Borough President, Ruben Diaz, Jr. Brooklyn Borough President, Eric Adams Manhattan Borough President, Gale A. Brewer Queens Borough President, Melinda Katz Staten Island Borough President, James Oddo STATE OF THE REGION: NEW YORK CITY:CITY | MEMBERS Table of Contents I. Executive Summary . 2 II. -
The Brooklyn Navy Yard Is Reinventing
NEW YORK BROOKLYN NAVY YARD BROOKLYN NAVY YARD RENDERINGS Exclusive: The Brooklyn Navy Yard is 7 reinventing architecture—and itself A new master plan and rezoning calls for three “vertical manufacturing” buildings, increased public access, and more educational programming By Diana Budds Sep 27, 2018, 11:02am EDT The Brooklyn Navy Yard released a new master plan that includes 5.1 million square feet of new development | Courtesy BNYDC and WXY Fifty years ago, the Brooklyn Navy Yard was launching ships; today, it’s launching startups. This evolution is no clearer than from atop Building 77, a World War II-era factory in the throes of reinvention. The ground floor’s polished concrete main hall features soon-to-open eateries, each with food production facilities behind their retail stalls. New windows usher light and air into the open-plan floors (much of the 16-story building didn’t have any windows originally). Tech companies, fashion brands, architecture firms, jewelry companies, and film production studios occupy the levels above. But take the elevator to the 16th floor, step onto the roof, and survey the panorama: You’ll spy Brooklyn Grange, a 1.5-acre rooftop farm; WeWork’s slick new headquarters in Dock 72, a 17-story, 675,000-square-foot glass office building; and a caravan of NYC ferries docked where warships once moored. Here, the new economy of New York is emerging—at least, that’s what the city and Navy Yard’s management hopes—and it’s ramping up the scale of this ambition. With a new NYC Ferry landing opening in 2019, increasing connectivity between the dock, located in the back of the Navy Yard, and the street (about a five-minute walk away) is a challenge. -
NYCHA Collection
Learning Places Spring 2016 LIBRARY / ARCHIVE REPORT Laguardia’s Wagner Archives - NYCHA Collection Jessica Samide 04.11.2015 INTRODUCTION The class met at Laguardia Community College outside of the Wagner Archives. The purpose of this visit was for the archivists to educate the class on NYCHA projects relating to Urban Renewal in Vinegar Hill. We broke off into two separate groups and each group sat down with an archivist who provided us with photographs. The photographs were not of Vinegar Hill, but they were of similar housing projects from Manhattan that were built around the same time. After the archivists discussed the photographs with us, we were taken into the space where they store their content. Lastly, we met with a Wikipedia Campus Ambassador who gave a presentation on editing wikipedia and how to post citations. PRE-VISIT REFLECTION The trip to the Wager Archives will be focused on gathering information on the New York City Housing Authority, which is an organization the was founded in the 1930s. Because the focus of my project is from the l880s until about 1915, the information that will be gathered is not very applicable to my research. However, I am still looking forward to learning about the various NYCHA projects. I may even be able to make connections on how the events of the time period that I am focusing my research on has led to the creation of this organization. SOURCES found 1. Created by NYCHA Carpenter Name Not Provided, “Diorama of Housing Development Apartment”, Laguardia Community College Wagner Archives, 2004. 2. -
Reinventing the Brooklyn Navy Yard: a National Model for Sustainable Urban Industrial Job Creation
Defence Sites 199 Reinventing the Brooklyn Navy Yard: a national model for sustainable urban industrial job creation A. H. Kimball & D. Romano Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation, USA Abstract When the federal government decommissioned the nation’s foremost naval shipbuilding facility in 1966, it was a devastating blow to Brooklyn’s economy. Tens of thousands of jobs were lost and the rusting, dilapidated Yard came to symbolize the massive loss of urban manufacturing jobs in New York and across the United States. Acquired by the City of New York in 1969, Yard management struggled to rekindle large-scale manufacturing and the days of the smoke stacks. It wasn’t until the late-1980s, under the leadership of new management, Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation (BNYDC), that the Yard began to turn the corner, emerging from near bankruptcy by focusing on a new kind of tenant. Very small, often creative class-driven, light industrial businesses with long-term relevance to New York City’s economy began to populate Yard buildings. Today the Navy Yard is widely recognized as a national model for the creation of well-paying urban industrial jobs. Having doubled its employment in the last ten years, the Yard is now home to more than 275 local businesses and 6,000 people who work in a variety of industries from traditional maritime to media, medicine, high-end craft, and green manufacturing. Over the next two years, BNYDC will add nearly two million square feet of new space and 2,000 new jobs. Investments in cutting-edge green infrastructure have nurtured a rapidly growing cluster of green manufacturers, lowered the Yard’s carbon footprint and made it a better neighbor to surrounding communities. -
Reinventing the Brooklyn Navy Yard by C
Reinventing the Brooklyn Navy Yard By C. J. HUGHES OCT. 30, 2015 The 300-acre Navy Yard has 7,000 people employed in 330 companies tucked away in structures amid rusting cranes and cannons. Pablo Enriquez for The New York Times The area by the Brooklyn Navy Yard can seem forbidding. Hulking warehouses line Flushing Avenue, a wide and busy street that hugs the yard for 16 blocks, while the yard, a massive former military complex turned manufacturing center, is almost totally enclosed by tall fences and walls. “It’s literally like working in a federal prison,” said Chris Terrell, a wine importer who stores his bottles at the yard and must venture past its security checkpoints. But the vibe will be less harsh going forward, as major steps are being taken to reinvent the area, part of the Wallabout neighborhood. Across from the yard, developers are putting the finishing touches on Navy Green, a $146 million housing complex with market-rate and affordable apartments being built on the site of a former Navy brig. Meanwhile, the Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation, the nonprofit entity that manages the city-owned facility, is removing some of the walls that have isolated the Navy Yard from the community, while adding a supermarket, a food hall and a park that the public can use. The new Navy Green housing complex will have market-rate and affordable apartments. Pablo Enriquez for The New York Times “It’s to send a message that we’re not turning our backs on the community,” said David Ehrenberg, the development corporation’s president and chief executive. -
An Economic Snapshot of Brooklyn
An Economic Snapshot of Brooklyn Thomas P. DiNapoli Kenneth B. Bleiwas New York State Comptroller Deputy Comptroller Report 4-2015 May 2014 Highlights Over the past decade, Brooklyn has expanded at a • rapid pace by attracting new businesses and Brooklyn is the largest of New York City’s five residents. Downtown Brooklyn is New York boroughs by population and the second-largest City’s largest business district outside of by area. With 2.6 million people, it is the second Manhattan, and there are a number of other most densely populated county in the nation. important economic centers in the borough, • Immigrants accounted for 39 percent of the including the Brooklyn Navy Yard, Sunset Park, borough’s residents in 2012, the third-largest Williamsburg and Greenpoint. share of any large county in the nation. Since 2003, the number of businesses in Brooklyn • Between 2003 and 2012, private sector has grown by 21 percent, a much faster rate of employment grew by 19.8 percent, faster than growth than in the rest of the City. Job growth has any other borough and nearly twice the rate of also been strong (19.8 percent), nearly twice as growth in the rest of the City. fast as in the rest of New York City. • Total private sector wages grew by 42 percent Health care and retail account for almost half of between 2003 and 2012, faster than any the jobs in Brooklyn, but many of these jobs offer borough outside of Manhattan. modest salaries. Professional and business services • Since 2003, the number of businesses has grown are growing rapidly, technology and creative firms by 21 percent, a much faster rate of growth are expanding, and manufacturing is reviving.