Brooklyn Ascending Land Co. Unveils Revised Atlantic Yards Plan, Citing Taller Towers and Higher Income Levels Amid Fears of Inadequate Affordable Housing.
A decades-old agreement to build hundreds of affordable housing units at the stalled Atlantic Yards site is getting a revamp, with new developers promising a makeover that includes taller towers and higher income levels for apartments considered affordable. Cirrus Real Estate Partners and LCOR took over the project in October from the bankrupt firm that failed to deliver nearly 900 units of affordable housing.
The revised plan calls for 3,600 additional apartments across the site, with buildings reaching up to 775 feet tall on some parcels. The development group is also seeking input from Brooklynites about their proposal at a public session Monday night inside the Barclays Center.
Veterans of the Atlantic Yards battles from the early 2000s will feel nostalgic about community feedback sessions on affordable housing, which has been a recurring theme throughout the stalled project's history. Advocates are already pushing back against the new plan, citing concerns that the increased income levels for affordable units would render them inaccessible to New Yorkers most in need of homes.
Under the revised plan, apartments reserved for higher-income renters would earn up to $130,000 per year and families of three could earn close to $200,000. This is significantly higher than the thresholds outlined in the earlier, unfulfilled affordable housing commitment.
The new development team has agreed to pay up to $12 million towards delinquent fines, but critics have deemed this amount inadequate. Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon expressed concerns that the project would again end without a railyard platform and promised affordable housing units for the site's location, instead prioritizing towers on the Flatbush Avenue lots.
The proposed development will be carried out in phases, with work starting on "solid ground" at a parcel diagonally opposite from the arena. Once complete, construction would resume above the railyard.
A decades-old agreement to build hundreds of affordable housing units at the stalled Atlantic Yards site is getting a revamp, with new developers promising a makeover that includes taller towers and higher income levels for apartments considered affordable. Cirrus Real Estate Partners and LCOR took over the project in October from the bankrupt firm that failed to deliver nearly 900 units of affordable housing.
The revised plan calls for 3,600 additional apartments across the site, with buildings reaching up to 775 feet tall on some parcels. The development group is also seeking input from Brooklynites about their proposal at a public session Monday night inside the Barclays Center.
Veterans of the Atlantic Yards battles from the early 2000s will feel nostalgic about community feedback sessions on affordable housing, which has been a recurring theme throughout the stalled project's history. Advocates are already pushing back against the new plan, citing concerns that the increased income levels for affordable units would render them inaccessible to New Yorkers most in need of homes.
Under the revised plan, apartments reserved for higher-income renters would earn up to $130,000 per year and families of three could earn close to $200,000. This is significantly higher than the thresholds outlined in the earlier, unfulfilled affordable housing commitment.
The new development team has agreed to pay up to $12 million towards delinquent fines, but critics have deemed this amount inadequate. Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon expressed concerns that the project would again end without a railyard platform and promised affordable housing units for the site's location, instead prioritizing towers on the Flatbush Avenue lots.
The proposed development will be carried out in phases, with work starting on "solid ground" at a parcel diagonally opposite from the arena. Once complete, construction would resume above the railyard.