15-quincy-street-brooklyn-0108.jpg
The affordable housing component of BFC’s project 150 Myrtle Avenue in Downtown Brooklyn is actually located a couple of miles away at 15 Quincy Street in Clinton Hill. The six-story building appears to be finished and PACC, BFC’s partner on the project, is currently accepting applications for 38 affordable units. (The DOB permits say that there are a total of 48 units in the building, so we can only guess that there are 10 market-rate units as well.) Four of the units are studios for those earning between $22,400 and $27,815; 34 one-bedrooms are for singles and couples making between $23,960 and $29,588. The deadline for applications is February 19; submission details available on the HPD link.
Quincy Street Applications [HPD] GMAP P*Shark DOB
Off-Site Affordable Housing Moving Along on Quincy [Brownstoner]
PACC Keeps Busy, Breaks Ground on Quincy [Brownstoner]


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

  1. Polemicist eat a dick!!! I you stupid enough to buy, you will be subject to robberies, drug dealing and declining value!!! This is not affordable housing but, bullshit!!!

    The What (enjoying the implosion)

    Someday this war is gonna end…

  2. A substantial number of citizens crave a Soviet style housing program where everyone lives in Barracks style housing projects.

    Unfortunately, it should be clear this building is nicer than any NYCHA property or anything built in a communist country. Thus, their arguments demonstrate obvious avarice.

    The starving runt of the litter certainly dreams of an ideal world where lambs are free for the taking. Conversely, it should be no surprise the lamb considers the wolf evil.

    Such is the way of the world where morality represents the howls against nature.

  3. Some posters on this board are incapable of being pleased. If affordable housing is not provided, people complain that it is needed. If affordable housing is provided, people complain that it’s (1) ugly and (2) separatist and classist.

    As usual, damned if you do, damned if you don’t.

  4. 150 Myrtle’s ‘affordable’ housing is a joke.
    For a studio the minimum income is 76K for a studio for $280K.
    A single person making that much should be able to afford 400K without any handouts the government is giving the developer for this project.

  5. 11:13 is correct; there are below-market condominiums at 150 Myrtle Avenue in addition to low-income, rental units on Quincy Street. Notwithstanding 10:39’s comments about class in America, keeping land acquisition costs down is one strategy when building affordable housing. I have no doubt that the cost of land at the corner of Myrtle and Flatbush was much higher than on Quincy.