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Twin apartment buildings designed by prolific Queens-based architect Gerald Caliendo are rising at 9 and 11 Orient Avenue in East Williamsburg. The site was previously home to a 19th century Italianate wood-frame house and garage.

Like the development now sweeping Flatbush, many apartment buildings have replaced older frame houses on large lots in this section of East Williamsburg in the last decade. The most notable to meet the wrecking ball was a Second Empire mansion on the same block at 59 Orient Avenue that starred in the film “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” then was taken over by squatters.

The film’s director, Michel Gondry, reportedly lived on the block, but didn’t save it. It was demolished in 2010 and is now an eight-unit rental building.

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Above, the house at 59 Orient Avenue in 2006. Photo by Scott Bintner for PropertyShark

When we stopped by the construction site recently, we saw that the basements have been dug and concrete blocks are stacking up as high as the first floor. When the buildings are finished, each will be four stories with seven units.

Visible just behind the construction site is 42 Maspeth, aka Forty2East, a new condo building on the other side of the block that launched sales in April.

Renderings posted on the construction fence show a modern design with contrasting facade materials of brick and stucco and metal grilles hiding air conditioning units under the windows.

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The rendering for 9 Orient Avenue, above.

Caliendo has designed many small apartment buildings in Brooklyn and a few in Manhattan and Queens. His Brooklyn buildings include 327 Herkimer Street and 120 Hart Street in Bed Stuy, and 1967 Bedford Avenue in Prospect Lefferts Gardens.

The house at 11 Orient Avenue last traded for $860,000 in 2004, according to public documents. The owner listed on permits is Shalom Rubinoff of Great Neck, N.Y.

59 Orient Avenue Bites the Dust [Brownstoner]
East Williamsburg Coverage [Brownstoner]

 

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Inside the green construction fence, above

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The rendering for 11 Orient Avenue, above

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Above, the 19th century house at 11 Orient Avenue before demolition. Photo by Scott Bintner for PropertyShark

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Above, 59 Orient Avenue in 2014. Photo by Christopher Bride for PropertyShark


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

  1. Although I would have preferred something more period looking going into these lots, there are already a few out of character “modern” buildings like the one at 59 going in or already built. Much better than these lots which have been empty since before we moved to the block 5 years ago. They were a dumping ground for trash and a place for graffiti “artists” to vandalize the house to the right. I’m sure she is glad something is going in here regardless of what they look like. Apparently before the old frame house was torn down it was already vacant with part of the roof missing and full of mold, vermin, and vagrants. At least there are no more vacant lots full of trash on the block now and this will add light and a people-presence late night there at the front of the street. Michael Condry still lives on the block and is in the process of redoing his house as well.