The Daily Dirt: Mega Housing Plans For Queens

The Daily Dirt: Mega Housing Plans For Queens

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Thousands of residential units are planned for queens.

This week, city officials have advanced two plans that require a huge amount of new homes in the town. One goes to the last phases of the rating process of the land use of the city, while the other is preparing to start.

Monday mayor Eric Adamas announced That Cirrus and LCOR will redevelop the airport of Flushing, which was taken out of use in the 1980s and has since returned to Wetlands to which you cannot have access. (You can, however, star through a fence with chain link along Linden Place, so I have seen a great blue heron on average.)

The plan requires 3,000 residential units and approximately 60 hectares of open space. Part of the site is limited in deed and will probably be the home of a new NYPD police office. This week’s announcement only indicated the selection of the development team. There is a long way ahead: the project must go through the city through the uniform assessment procedure of the uniform land use.

The same day, Queens Borough President Donovan Richard’s approval of the re -use of Long Island City, who could plain the road for 14,700 residential units that are built in the following decade. The proposal is waiting for assessment by the City Planning Commission and the city council.

During a press conference on Monday, Richards indicated that a announcement The Creedmoor Psychiatric Center will be made in a few weeks. The State wants to build 2,800 houses on 58 hectares of state ownership in eastern queens. The state is expected to make requests for proposals that developers are looking for the houses to build in phases.

In the meantime, the construction of the first phase of Willets Point is underway. That project is expected to ultimately take 2500 affordable homes.

We think about: Has your building Confirmed security Whether protocols changed after the fatal shootings Monday at 345 Park Avenue? Send a note to kathryn@thereealdeal.com.

Something we have learned: Mayor Eric Adams was posted to start the ‘living week’ A short video Tour – Ć  la “MTV Cribs” – by Gracie Mansion on social media. It’s really something.

Elsewhere in New York …

Mayor Eric Adams announced a new plan at the Department of Housing Preservation and Development that requires developers that they make at least 20 percent of their units in two bedrooms if they want to be eligible for the Senior Affordable Rental Apartments Program, Gothamist -reports. Adams says that the new rule will help seniors with a low income who want to live with family members or carers.

– Nearly 200 owners of Cannabis -Potheek have to move their companies further from schools after the office of cannabis management has incorrectly calculated their location, according to City and state. According to the Statten Act, pharmacies must be 500 feet of the ownership line of a school, but regulators have misjudged the distance in the early days of the program. Owners of existing pharmacies must move shop fronts before their license can be extended, and those who are still in the application process must change plans.

Payability problems are the driving of New Yorkers in the working class to leave the state with much higher rates than their rich counterparts, According to New York Focus. Research from the Fiscal Policy Institute showed that 90 percent of the state loss of the State came from New York City, where the average New Yorker is four times more likely to leave than someone in the top 1 percent of the income. – Quinn Waller

Closing time

Residential: The best residential deal was recorded on Tuesday was $ 13.2 million For a 4,017 square base, sponsor-sale condominium unit in DDGs 180 East 88th Street-building in Carnegie Hill. Brown Harris Stevens’ Lisa K. Lippman Had the list.

Commercial: The best commercial deal was $ 13.5 million For a 12,000 square foot retail ownership on 1317-1319 36th Street in Kensington.

New on the market: The highest price for a home that hit the market was $ 25 million For a house of 3300 square foot on 220 77th Street in Bay Ridge. Alexander Boriskin, Ammanda Espinal and Michael Lorber from Douglas Elliman have the list.

Breaking Ground: The largest submitted new building application was for a proposed project of 18,321 square base, three -storey mixed use in 226 64th Street in Sunset Park. Joseph Wasserman has submitted the permit on behalf of developer John Calise.

– Matthew Elo


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