bed-stuy-homeless.jpg
The Daily News has another story about a new construction building that’s been turned into a homeless shelter, this time in Bed-Stuy rather than Crown Heights. In this case, a building at 652 Park Avenue was allowed to be built to twice the size allowed by zoning because architect Harry Radusky said in DOB filings that it was going to be used as a dorm for teachers and students at a Jewish school in Williamsburg—thus qualifying for “community use” supersizing. While DOB officials say that the property’s current use as a homeless shelter likely also qualifies as a community facility, some residents aren’t thrilled with the switcheroo: “We were deceived. When they first started building it they said it was going to be apartments,” said Melissa Mona, 27, who lives across from the hulking building at 652 Park Ave., which now takes in a revolving door of homeless families. “It’s not right,” added Mona. “I think we should know who’s moving into our community.” Radusky—who has a track record of manipulating and sidestepping DOB restrictions—claims no wrongdoing. The developer of 652 Park is getting paid $100,000 a month in rent by the Bushwick Economic Development Corp. for the shelter.
Bed-Stuy Residents Furious Over Condo Project [NY Daily News] GMAP
Condo-Turned-Shelter Sparks Homeless Frenzy [Brownstoner]
Photo from Everyscape.


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

  1. i can sympathize with the frustration at the bait-and-switch, and i get the whole disproportional public services facilities argument. but i don’t get the sentiment that they think they have a right to know who’s moving into their community – in this case, it boils down to knowing who’s paying the rent. no one really has a right to know that, and you don’t know what the answer is for the majority of the neighbors. the difference here is that this woman thinks the knowledge would allow her to judge the suitability of these people as neighbors, and that’s kind of scary. does that mean i ought to investigate which of my neighbors are rent controlled and which of them might be reliant trust funds (and everything in between) in order to be properly monitoring my community?

  2. There is going t obe a lot more of this in this area. Crown Heights, Bed stuy, Clinton Hill, and Fort Greene have all been marked for this kind of conversion. I heard a certain empty tower in Fort Greene that aint selling is in discusions with HUD.

  3. This switcheroo seems to be common. Why isn’t anyone on it? Or is it more convenient not to be? I have a friend now who can’t get a coo (is that the right phrasing) because her condo (which was built initially as housing for rabbinical students as dorms) was then turned into condos and sold. I am not sure of the particulars, only that they have been in a lawsuit for ages and none of the owners knew what the buildings were originally supposed to be built for (and apparently, by calling it a dorm, these building are held to different zoning standards.)and now no one call sell, or refinance. Weird that developers get to side step regulations and seemingly don’t have to pay any price….

  4. Wow a dorm building built for teachers is now a dorm building for homeless people…….it is really getting scary, I mean how close can we get to One Prospect Park being converted into a Methadone clinic before we realize that we are in the grips of “the-end-of-days.”

  5. Is it near a popular synagogue? I’m told those more than absurd $$ for houses in Borough Park (e.g., $8 million for a $750k house), though I’m still convinced it’s some sort of money laundering scheme.

    Why shouldn’t the homeless have to pay a similar premium?

1 2