Housing Overview 26 Buildings and Over 4,000 Units of Housing
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Housing Overview 26 buildings and over 4,000 units of housing PERMANENT SUPPORTIVE & WORKFORCE HOUSING | NEW YORK CITY 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 TIMES SQUARE THE DOROTHY ROSS PRINCE GEORGE THE CHRISTOPHER SCHERMERHORN BROOK THE LEE Manhattan | Opened 1991 FRIEDMAN RESIDENCE Manhattan | Opened 1999 Manhattan | Opened 2004 Brooklyn | Opened 2009 Bronx | Opened 2010 Manhattan | Opened 2010 Manhattan | Opened 1996 • 652 Units • 416 Units • 207 Units (includes 40 • 217 Units • 190 Units • 263 Units • Low-income working • 178 Units • Low-income working transitional units) • Low-income working • Low-income working • Low-income working persons and formerly • Low-income working persons and formerly • Low-income working persons (many in arts and persons and formerly persons, formerly homeless homeless single adults persons (many in arts and homeless single adults persons, formerly homeless entertainment industry), homeless single adults single adults and vulnerable • Owned and managed by entertainment industry), • Owned and managed by single adults and vulnerable and formerly homeless • Owned and managed by youth (many of whom have Breaking Ground seniors and people living Breaking Ground youth (many of whom have single adults Breaking Ground aged out of foster care) with HIV/AIDS aged out of foster care) • Social services provided • Social services provided by • Owned and managed by • Social services provided by • Owned and managed by by the Center for Urban • Managed by Breaking CUCS • Owned and managed by Breaking Ground BronxWorks Breaking Ground Ground Breaking Ground Community Services (CUCS) • Listed on the National • Social services provided by • Breaking Ground’s first • Social services provided by • Breaking Ground’s first • Owned and social services Register of Historic Places • Social services provided by CUCS and The Actors Fund residence in the Bronx CUCS and The Door provided by The Actors Fund • The historic Prince George CUCS and Good Shepherd residence and still the • Breaking Ground’s first new 2,400 sq. ft. community • LEED Silver Ballroom and adjacent Services • largest supportive housing construction project space used by tenants and Project cost: $59 million gallery event spaces provide • project in the nation • Site of the former Robert On-site community theater community members rental revenue to support • Listed on the National McBurney YMCA (which • Breaking Ground’s work • Project cost: $59 million • LEED Silver Register of Historic Places inspired the Village People • CSA program brings fresh, song, “YMCA”) • Project cost: $43 million • Project cost: $50 million affordable produce to • Project cost: $32 million tenants and community • Project cost: $40 million 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 THE DOMENECH LENNIGER HEGEMAN 40 RIVERSIDE BOSTON ROAD REDWOOD SYDELLE Brooklyn | Opened 2011 Bronx | Opened 2011 Brooklyn | Opened 2012 Manhattan | Opened 2015 Bronx | Opened 2016 Brooklyn | Opened 2016 Bronx | Opened 2016 • 72 Units • 92 Units • 161 Units • 55 Units • 154 Units • 80 Units • 102 Units • Low-income and formerly • Low-income working • Low-income working • Low-income working • Low-income working • Low-income seniors • Low-income working and homeless seniors families/individuals and persons and formerly families/individuals persons and formerly • Social services provided by formerly homeless families/ • Owned, managed, and formerly homeless single homeless single adults • Owned and managed by homeless single adults Breaking Ground individuals adults social services provided by • Owned and managed by Breaking Ground • Owned and managed by • Owned by East Brooklyn • Managed by Breaking Breaking Ground • Managed by Breaking Breaking Ground Breaking Ground Congregations (EBC) and Ground Ground • Breaking Ground’s first • Social services provided by • Social services provided managed by Wavecrest • Owned and social services housing project 100% for • Owned and social services CUCS by Services for the Management provided by CUCS seniors provided by CUCS • Features a community UnderServed (SUS) • Funded in part by NYS • Project cost: $24 million garden for use by tenants and neighborhood residents Medicaid savings initiative • LEED Silver to target high-cost users of healthcare • Project cost: $43 million • Project cost: $49 million Updated April 1, 2021 PERMANENT SUPPORTIVE & WORKFORCE HOUSING | NEW YORK CITY, CONTINUED 15 16 17 18 19 A SCATTER SITE PARK HOUSE WEBSTER RESIDENCE LA CENTRAL EDWIN’S PLACE THE HANNIGAN BETANCES Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens Bronx | Opened 2017 Bronx | Opened 2018 Bronx | Opened 2019 Brooklyn | Opened 2021 Manhattan | Opened 2021 Bronx | In construction • 171 Units Comprised of two adjacent buildings, Park House and Webster • 161 Units • 126 Units • 117 Units • 152 Units • Formerly homeless Avenue together form our second-largest residential development, • Low-income working • Low-income working and • Low-income working and • • Seniors who have individuals and our first foray into affordable family housing. persons and formerly formerly homeless families/ formerly homeless families/ experienced or are at risk of • Units “scattered” in multiple • 248 Units (affordable • 171 Units (supportive homeless single adults individuals individuals homelessness properties operated by Co-owned and managed by Managed by Breaking housing) housing) • • Co-owned and managed by • • Breaking Ground’s first private landlords Breaking Ground Ground • Low-income working • Low-income working Breaking Ground passive house project • Social services provided by families/individuals persons and formerly • Co-owned and social • Co-owned and social • Owned and social services • Part of the NYCHA NextGen Breaking Ground homeless single adults services provided by services provided by provided by CUCS • Owned and managed by program Breaking Ground • Owned and managed by Comunilife African American Planning Commission Inc. (AAPCI) • Project cost: $98 million • Enterprise Green Breaking Ground • Larger project will include nearly 1,000 affordable • Project cost: $75 million • Project cost: $88 million • Social services provided by CUCS units, YMCA, restaurant and retail space • Enterprise Green • Project cost: $67 million • Project cost: $64 million B C 90 SANDS STREET SUTPHIN BLVD Brooklyn | In construction Queens | In pre-development • 491 Units • 115 Units • Low-to-moderate-income • Low-income and formerly working persons and homeless seniors formerly homeless single • Breaking Ground’s first adults residence in Queens Former Watchtower Society • • 15,000 sf Community Residences Healthcare Network (CHN) • Project cost: $233 million medical clinic on-site • Project cost: $68 million BREAKINGGROUND.ORG PERMANENT SUPPORTIVE & WORKFORCE HOUSING | CT & UPSTATE NY 20 21 22 BETTY RUTH AND CEDARWOODS EASTMAN COMMONS MILTON B. HOLLANDER Willimantic, CT | Opened 2012 Rochester, NY | Opened 2012 FOUNDATION CENTER Hartford, CT | Opened 2009 • 60 Units • 80 Units • Low-income working • Low income working • 70 Units persons persons and formerly homeless single adults • Low-income working • Owned by Breaking Ground; families Third party property • Owned by Breaking Ground; • Owned by Breaking Ground; management Third party property Third party property • LEED Silver management management • Project cost: $14 million • Project cost: $15 million • 13,000 sq. ft. of commercial space • Project cost: $24 million TRANSITIONAL HOUSING & DROP-IN CENTERS 23 24 25 26 THE ANDREWS MIDWOOD EAST FLATBUSH QUEENS DROP-IN CENTER STABILIZATION BEDS Manhattan | Opened 2009 Brooklyn | Opened 2016 Brooklyn | Opened 2017 Queens | Opened May 2017 Various Locations (ongoing construction) Known as Safe Havens, Breaking Ground’s transitional residences provide private rooms with shared • 220 units (on average/ bathrooms and living areas, meals, plus medical and psychiatric care; social services and housing • 75-person capacity once capacity varies) assistance provided by Breaking Ground. construction completed • Social services and housing • 146 Units • 51 Units • 110 Units • Street homeless individuals assistance provided by Breaking Ground • Chronically street homeless • Chronically street homeless • Chronically street homeless • Breaking Ground’s first individuals (men only) individuals individuals drop-in center • Owned by Breaking Ground • Meals and respite from the elements; social services • Formerly a “flophouse” on and housing assistance the Bowery provided by Breaking • Units designed through a Ground competition co-sponsored by the Architectural League of New York • Project cost: $14 million BREAKINGGROUND.ORG Locations Buildings and program sites in New York City and beyond Hartford, CT 20 21 9 14 Willimantic, CT 16 758 15 NEW APARTMENTS 12 IN DEVELOPMENT 17 6 19 A 152 11 BRONX 2 22 Rochester, NY 1 4 491 3 BROOKLYN 23 7 B 115 5 26 C QUEENS 18 8 BUILDING 10 13 25 THE FUTURE 24 = permanent housing = transitional housing/drop-in center = Breaking Ground office BREAKINGGROUND.ORG.