The East New York Neighborhood Plan in Pictures Part 2

The East New York Neighborhood Plan in Pictures Part 2, shows us the construction already underway. These photos are of the buildings constructed on the parking lot NYCHA sold to developers.

Again I start with the proposed illustration of buildings for that lot. You will see it indicates two new buildings. One is the senior living facility. This building is completed and partially occupied.

The other is the building on Wortman and Van Siclen Aves. As you will see in the photos only the senior living facility was delivered as promised.

The East New York Neighborhood Plan

The Proposal Photo

I draw your attention to the 2 buildings on Wortman Ave. The one on Van Siclen Ave and Wortman is a multi-family building aka project style building. The Building on Schenck–pronounce “skank”–is the senior living facility. There are no other buildings shown here. This is what the neighborhood was led to believe. The photos of actual construction will show differently.

This photo shows the projected placement of new buildings NYCHA will allow developers to build.
This photo shows the projected placement of new buildings NYCHA will allow developers to build.

Construction So Far

wide-view-senior-facility
Wide view of the senior facility
The senior living facility on Schenck Ave
The senior living facility on Schenck Ave
East New York Plan. This photo shows buildings next to and behind the senior citizen building. They were not in the proposal.
East New York Plan. This photo shows buildings next to and behind the senior citizen building. They were not in the proposal.
Building behind the community center
The building behind the community center
Close proximity of buildings. Notice building in the rear, it is behind the senior living facility.
The close proximity of buildings. Notice building in the rear, it is behind the senior living facility.
The community center under construction.
The community center under construction.
The NYCHA parking lot next to the steam plant.
The NYCHA parking lot next to the steam plant.
NYCHA Steam Plant on Stanley near NYCHA parking lot.
NYCHA Steam Plant on Stanley near NYCHA parking lot.
Buildings 5, 6, and 7? of the development.
Buildings 5, 6, and 7? of the development.
This the building behind the senior facility. See that red area, that's a panel on building 7
Building 7: This the building behind the senior facility. See that red area, that’s a panel on building 7
Wide view of building on Van Siclen Ave, Senior Living Facility and building in rear
Wide view of building on Van Siclen Ave, Senior Living Facility and building in the rear
This is the building on the corner of Van Siclen and Wortman. It's supposed to have 4 floors only. I see more than 4 floors.
This is the building on the corner of Van Siclen and Wortman. It’s supposed to have 4 floors only. I see more than 4 floors.
The four buildings on Van Siclen Ave
The four buildings on Van Siclen Ave. Building close to the stoplight is the same building near the senior facility.
This is the walkway between the buildings going from Wortman Ave to Van Siclen Ave. Where is the recreation area?
This is the walkway between the buildings going from Wortman Ave to Van Siclen Ave. Where is the recreation area?
The front of the buildings
The front of the buildings faces walkway

Comparison

The Linden Houses

Photos of the Linden Houses show a development that has four buildings. Each is 8 stories tall and house a total of 252 families. If you’re doing the math the first floor only has 7 families, not 8.

Click here to see Part One: Linden Houses

Included is the recreation area known as “The Circle.” It has playground activities for the children as well as seating. Each building has seating out front. Two buildings have grassy areas in the back.

These grassy areas have been designated as underutilized. If NYCHA relaxes its rules more families would utilize these grassy areas.

The layout gives some humanity to this project.  With its trees, grass and recreational area this development avoids the concrete jungle look.

The Parking Lot Development

Development photos show a total of 10 buildings and a parking lot. Seven of the buildings are multi-family. The remaining two are the senior facility and the NYCHA steam plant. The parking lot is for NYCHA vehicles.

Two of the multi-family buildings are behind the senior facility. The community center is next to the senior facility. Speculation has it that these buildings are the reason the senior facility is partially occupied. Residents were told that an area would be set aside for seniors to relax. No such area exists. As I said, speculation.

Estimate of Residents

The total amount of families I project for this development, not counting the seniors is 240. That’s 12 families less than the Linden Houses. Again this does not include the senior facility.

There seems to be no outside recreational area. This means the children in this development will go across the street to “The Circle”.

You may have noticed the lack of space for a seating area, grass, and trees. This development will have that concrete jungle look.

Community Center Usage

Oh one last thing, community centers are usually for the development that they sit in. Boulevard Houses have one. It is used by the residents of the Boulevard Houses.

So what does that mean for the development community center?  Is this center only for its residence? If so then consider this. The residence of Linden Houses will share The Circle.  But they cannot use the community center…interesting.

You just read: Part 2 The East New York Neighborhood Plan in Pictures

Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer and nothing stated here is legal advice. This article applies to the five boroughs of New York. All information deemed accurate but not guaranteed. Always check the real estate laws in your part of the country.


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