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It looks like the Michael Muroff-designed development at 385 Union Avenue in Williamsburg is getting close to the finish line. What do you think of how this 47-unit project looks? At the very least, the developer will be able to use easy access to DuMont burgers as a selling point!
Development Watch: 65 Ainslie Street [Brownstoner] GMAP P*Shark DOB
Construction MegaWatch: Burg’s Union Triangle [Curbed]


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

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  1. The building is not great but considering what’s out there, neighbors could be worse off.

    But really, what troubles me is all the hype about Dumont burgers (I just created a user name only to comment on this… I’m sure the wine I had with my t-bone had something to do with it). Listen, I’ve had them twice and they’re at best mediocre. Design of the place, including garden, is outstanding but the food is really not good.

  2. No balconies b/c greedy developers want to maximize FAR. You can’t have sidewalk overhang, so you’d have to do a setback, or tiered buildings…which bring up their own issues. I like this place but the top floor treatment doesn’t seem to have been executed with the same skill.

  3. That’s my old hood, it’s almost unrecognizable now.

    You guys do realize all this faux-modernist box architecture looks kinda like a soviet gulag, right? Or as gracias says, orwellian-government. It goes well with recessionist chic, but… I want to hug that brave little yellow building next door and tell them to hang in there.

  4. This is a pretty nice building – I live close by and consider myself a pretty big critic with regards to most of the crap that usually goes up in Williamsburg.

    Union really isn’t much to look at right now, but this whole stretch, from Grand pretty much all the way up to McCarren is being developed heavily. Whether they end up staying condos, or become rentals (yes, people will live in these buildlings, the will not sit vacant – like most of you people who think williamsburg will turn into something out of escape from ny), it will just add more foot traffic to the street (other then people going to Dumont, Barcade, Union Pool, and Royal Oak)

    Despite the usual inane comments re: anything in Williamsburg isn’t worth more then $5, I think if this building prices itself around $600psf they might see the smaller units move.

  5. What I don’t understand is why so many apartment buildings go up with no balconies?? I would never get an apt, especially in Brooklyn, that doesn’t have some outdoor space. Yet I see tons of buildings going up with not a singe balcony or patio… it just seems weird to me.

  6. Looks fine — seems a good “fit” to the area. It’s definitely a part of town that’s “not so bad” or “not the worst corner of williamsburg” as christopher put it above.

    How many hundreds and hundreds of thousands of dollars are we going to be convinced is “reasonable” for a 2-bed in this place?