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Permits Filed for 335 Bond Street in Gowanus, Brooklyn

335 Bond Street in Gowanus, Brooklyn via Google Maps

Permits have been filed for a 14-story mixed-use building with affordable housing at 335 Bond Street in Gowanus, Brooklyn. Located at the intersection of Carroll Street and Bond Street, the corner lot is near the Carroll Street subway station, serviced by the F and G trains. Robert Slinin is listed as the owner behind the applications.

The proposed 155-foot-tall development will yield 77,383 square feet, with 68,106 square feet designated for residential space, 4,644 square feet for manufacturing space, and 4,633 square feet for commercial space. The building will have 73 residences, most likely rentals based on the average unit scope of 932 square feet. The concrete-based structure will also have a 30-foot-long rear yard but no accessory parking.

Jay Valgora of Studio V Architecture is listed as the architect of record.

Demolition permits have not been filed yet. An estimated completion date has not been announced.

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10 Comments on "Permits Filed for 335 Bond Street in Gowanus, Brooklyn"

  1. Residential, Commercial and Industrial mixed use!!! We need more of this.

  2. What is the Gowaus Rezone?
    The Gowanus Rezone was originally proposed under the Bloomberg administration while now-Mayor de Blasio was still the councilperson representing District 39. Originally limited to 12-story buildings with 20% affordable housing, the ambition of the upzoning has exploded since Councilmember Brad Lander was elected to replace de Blasio. The new plan, developed in partnership with developers, rewards them with huge tax cuts and credits, while demanding very few benefits for the community.

    It Is Enormous
    Extends Far Beyond Gowanus: The rezoning plan spans 80 blocks bounded by Bond Street to the west, Baltic Street to the north, 4th Avenue to the east from Atlantic Avenue to 15th Street and cuts off near Hamilton Avenue. It is the single largest rezone proposed during the de Blasio administration.

    Huge Influx of New Residents: The plan would bring 8,200 additional apartments to the neighborhood — and at least 20,000 new residents.

    Dozens of New Luxury Towers: The plan would allow 22 to 30 story towers to be built lining both sides of the Gowanus Canal, and along 4th Avenue between 9th Street and Atlantic Ave, and in other areas. The yellow buildings in the image above identify the new luxury apartment buildings proposed for the neighborhood.

    Majority of Apartments Will Be Super Expensive: 70% of the new housing would be high-end luxury apartments, with rents well above $3,000, according to current trends.

    It Is Environmentally Irresponsible & Dangerous

    Deeply Toxic Land: The land surrounding the Gowanus Canal once housed different types of industries that produced toxic waste that has seeped deep into the ground. The parcel of land called Public Place has coal tar at depths of 150 feet and after remediation will still need to be monitored in perpetuity — this is the land where a school and most of the affordable housing is planned. And the City keeps reducing how much it will clean this area.

    The Canal is Extremely Toxic: The Gowanus Canal is one of the most polluted waterways in the United States as a result of over a century of industrial and municipal negligence. In fact, the Gowanus is so polluted that the federal government recognized it as a Superfund site in 2010 for its imminent threat to community health. The Gowanus Canal is not only full of industrial runoff, it also has a pathogen level that is a threat to human health as a breeding ground for antibiotic-resistant organisms.

    Overwhelming Canal with Raw Sewage: When the sewer system in the area can’t handle all of the water coming into it, the excess runs directly into the Gowanus Canal. The 20,000 new residents the rezone proposes to bring to the neighborhood will increase the amount of waste entering the area’s sewer system tenfold. In fact, the EPA recently said there was no way to keep the water clean with the amount of development that is being planned.

    Building in a Flood Zone: Most of the area to be rezoned is in a FEMA Flood Zone A — land that is most likely to be overwhelmed if another Hurricane Sandy should hit the area. Environmentalists and others are demanding that we don’t build more housing in flood zones, putting more people in harm’s way.

    Impedes Canal Cleanup: The residents of Gowanus, along with Representative Nydia Velasquez, fought very hard —against the wishes of then-councilmember Bill de Blasio— to get the Federal Government to clean up the canal. Our current councilmember Brad Lander did nothing to assist this effort. But the City is now reneging on its responsibilities to address the CSO discharges, and has already delayed the cleanup for over a decade, claiming they don’t have the money needed. Yet the City is about to subsidize an enormous rezone. Why are new luxury towers more important than a clean canal?

    On Earth Day 2015, environmental activist Christopher Swain swam through the Canal to raise awareness in the community about the water’s toxicity. Swain described the Canal as being the dirtiest water that he had ever swam in, and commented that it was like “swimming through a dirty diaper.”

    It Is Expensive

    The city proposes incentivizing private developers to build wildly profitable luxury housing, while passing the risk to NYC taxpayers. These developers will receive decades-long tax breaks and credits, costing billions in taxpayer funds.

    Millionaires Will Pay No Property Tax: Because of the 421a program, developers of luxury apartment towers will not pay any property tax for 35 years. The 421a program is estimated to cost the city $2.4 billion a year in lost tax revenue. And who is going to pay for the infrastructure required for 20,000 new residents?

    Taxpayers Will Be on the Hook for Three Times What it Costs to Clean the Land Each developer will be responsible for cleaning their own plots of land, potentially exposing neighboring residents to toxic fumes during their work. As part of the Brownfield Cleanup Program, developers will then be reimbursed three times what it cost them to do the cleanup, up to $35 million for each development. These are our taxpayer dollars, going directly to millionaire developers, while the city is facing an economic crisis.

    Wealthy Investors Will Pay NO Taxes on Profits: Almost the entire area to be rezoned is part of an “opportunity zone,” a special designation that is given to “distressed” communities, and which allows investors who make money on the rezone to avoid paying any taxes on their profits. In New York State, losses from the “Opportunity Zone” program may amount to as much as $63 million annually for New York State, and an additional $31 million annually for New York City

    Elimination of Jobs: The plan will eliminate many of the existing manufacturing zones, thereby eradicating the opportunity for new, diverse jobs. This, at a time when bringing industry back to NYC is what experts are recommending will spur economic growth.

    It is Unjust

    Luxury Housing In Distressed Neighborhood: Our elected representatives use misleading data to justify building luxury housing by claiming the new housing is being built in a wealthy neighborhood. In fact, the rezone area has been designated by the Federal Government as an “Opportunity Zone” — a low-income census tract with an individual poverty rate of at least 20 percent and median family income no greater than 80 percent of the area median—thereby threatening current residents with displacement. Studies of prior rezones in the neighborhood have been proven to have displaced thousands of BIPOC and low-income residents.

    “Affordable” Apartments, Toxic Land: Our electeds promise that a small proportion of the new housing will be affordable. What they don’t mention is that the largest area of affordable housing will be built on what is perhaps the most polluted land in the United States. They also don’t mention that the vast majority of the so-called “affordable” housing will only be available to those earning $100k or more.

    Real Estate Industry Bought Off Electeds: Our elected representatives have raised hundreds of thousands of dollars from luxury real estate developers. This is not a plan for current or future residents, but for the ambition of the real estate industry, and the politicians they own.

    Brad Lander Ignored Constituents’ Plea: Despite the fact that 1500 people signed a petition, and over 400 sent letters, demanding a moratorium on the rezone given the pandemic and economic outlook, Brad Lander continues to forge forward, without even acknowledging the letters from his constituents.

    “Virtual” ULURP is Illegal: Brad Lander and the Department of City Planning are pushing for a “virtual” ULURP (Universal Land Use Review Process) for his rezone, meaning meetings that are meant to take place in person will happen online. Assemblywoman Jo Ann Simon and others have voiced their opposition to this approach, arguing that the community deserves an in-person process. In fact,”virtual ULURP” is downright illegal.

    What the Community Decides, Developers Override: During a series of contentious meetings that Brad Lander called “Bridging Gowanus,” there was one thing the vast majority of participants agreed on: they didn’t want the to would bring a forest of tall luxury towers and overwhelm the neighborhood. The initial rezone plan acknowledged those concerns somewhat. But after developers lobbied the Councilmembers and Community Board members for much greater heights, the revised plan gave them just what they wanted, and now the towers can reach to 30 stories—five times as tall as neighboring buildings. So why did we waste our time at these pointless meetings?

  3. Lesson learned. Don’t be an alarmist and unreasonable nimby. Don’t shoot down every proposal without providing at least ONE actionable alternative (talking about affordable housing is rich without an actual substantive proposal to provide it). If the people holding the purse strings think you’re impossible to please, they’ll stop listening.

    Sure the rezoning could be better, sure there could be more efforts to upgrade and clean things…but what was the alternative? This is a million times better for the neighborhood than the current status quo of garbage strewn lots and a new self-storage place every few years (I will lament the inevitable departure of dyke’s lumber).

    Who knows, perhaps the influx of new residents and wealth will put pressure on the various environmental governing agencies to actually clean up the canal and surrounding soil.

    • Arman, you write, “the current status quo of garbage strewn lots ” The current vacant lots have been bought by huge developers from long time property owners who cashed out over the last couple of years . These developers have left their properties vacant and unbuilt because they were zoned for manufacturing and they were waiting for the rezoning getting passed.
      You write” perhaps the influx of new residents and wealth will put pressure on the various environmental governing agencies to actually clean up the canal and surrounding soil”
      So the whole point of the rezoning according to DEBlasio and Brad Lander is to build so called “affordable housing” but your point is if we build housing for the very rich, not the poor the city will come to the rescue and clean up the canal?
      Right now they have no clue how to clean up the canal from a hundred years of toxic chemicals and sludge

  4. Fabulous news! More, please! NYC desperately needs more housing, everywhere.

    And LOL at the cut-paste NIMBY garbage posted above. Waaah! No housing, jobs or legitimate commerce in the middle of NYC. We want vacant lots and illegal scrap yards only!

    • Crawford
      try rebutting JUST ONE OF THE FACTS that I posted instead of spouting the usual NIMBY garbage.
      Go ahead try and bestow some of your infinite wisdom on me.
      There are untold manufacturing jobs and artists that will be forced out with this disastrous rezoning.

  5. Guesser, no one is going to bother rebutting your “facts” because they’re nothing but an avalanche of NIMBY-crazed lies. The rezoning is fantastic for the city, delivers thousands of units of affordable housing, thousands of new jobs, billions in new tax revenue, and transforms a a giant dumping ground into potentially one of the most vibrant neighborhoods in NYC. You’d have to be nuts to prefer vacant lots, garbage dumps and illegal chop shops over affordable housing, new schools, new job centers, improved environment and improved transit. If you want to live in a filthy vacant slum, move to Gary or East St. Louis.

    • Crawdad,
      again if they’re nothing but NIMBY -crazed lies please point out exactly where the lies are? C’MON JUST POINT OUT ONE LIE.
      YOU CAN’T because they are FACTS.
      So instead you spew out and repeat like a parrot the statements that the deep pocketed, greedy developers and our soon to be gone Mayor DEBlasio make.
      You write “The rezoning is fantastic for the city, delivers thousands of units of affordable housing, thousands of new jobs, billions in new tax revenue” Where in the hell are you getting this information from and can you back up your statements with even a scintilla of evidence?
      Just give me one piece of evidence, just one to back up your hyperbole.

  6. Obviously no one is gonna go through all your lies. But basically everything you wrote was cut-paste NIMBY propaganda. “Majority of apartments will be super expensive” is an outright lie. 1/3 of apartments will be low rent subsidized, and the remainder will be market rate. None will be “super expensive” by local standards. “Overwhelming canal with raw sewage” is an outright lie. No “raw sewage” in development plans. “Millionaires will pay no property tax” is an outright lie. All homeowners will pay regular property taxes, and the city doesn’t even know your wealth when they send you a property tax bill, so the notion that “millionaires will pay no property tax” is preposterous. “Impedes canal cleanup” is a lie. Canal cleanup is almost completed and the federal govt. is doing the cleanup and they actually support the rezoning. And on and on. All lies.

    • “Majority of apartments will be super expensive” is an outright lie. 1/3 of apartments will be low rent subsidized, and the remainder will be market rate. None will be “super expensive” by local standards.
      -Crawdad I’m no genius but from what I learned from school 2/3 is bigger than 1/3 so that’s a MAJORITY.
      What are the LOCAL STANDARDS , do you have any clue what the heck that statement means?

      “Overwhelming canal with raw sewage” is an outright lie. No “raw sewage” in development plans.
      -WHERE IS THE CRAP FROM THE FLUSHING OF THOUSANDS OF TOILETS SUPPOSED TO GO????? Right into the canal that’s where.
      I didn’t know that developers now add raw sewage into their development plans? That sounds like a great selling point!

      “Millionaires will pay no property tax” is an outright lie. All homeowners will pay regular property taxes, and the city doesn’t even know your wealth when they send you a property tax bill, so the notion that “millionaires will pay no property tax” is preposterous.
      – Have you ever heard of 421A ? Because of the 421a program, developers of luxury apartment towers will not pay any property tax for 35 years. The 421a program is estimated to cost the city $2.4 billion a year in lost tax revenue. And who is going to pay for the infrastructure required for 20,000 new residents?

      “Impedes canal cleanup” is a lie. Canal cleanup is almost completed and the federal govt. is doing the cleanup and they actually support the rezoning. And on and on. All lies.
      -Gowanus is so polluted that the federal government recognized it as a Superfund site in 2010 and now 11 years later and it’s not even halfway done.So I don’t know how you can state that’s it’s ALMOST completed? The parcel of land called Public Place has coal tar at depths of 150 feet and after remediation will still need to be monitored in perpetuity — this is the land where a school and most of the affordable housing is planned.

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