Permits Filed for 60 Cedar Street in Bushwick, Brooklyn

60 Cedar Street in Bushwick, Brooklyn via Google Maps

Permits have been filed for an 18-story mixed-use building at 60 Cedar Street in Bushwick, Brooklyn. Located between Myrtle and Evergreen Avenues, the lot is one block from the Central Avenue subway station, serviced by the M train. Louis Handler of BTE is listed as the owner behind the applications.

The proposed 183-foot-tall development will yield 105,666 square feet, with 105,140 square feet designated for residential space and 526 square feet for community facility space. The building will have 145 residences, most likely rentals based on the average unit scope of 725 square feet. The concrete-based structure will also have a cellar, an 82-foot-long rear yard, 122 enclosed parking spaces, and 36 open parking spaces.

S. Wieder Architect 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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5 Comments on "Permits Filed for 60 Cedar Street in Bushwick, Brooklyn"

  1. Good height for the area. SWA seems to do good work.

  2. Lots of 90s/00s concrete front yard one and two-families in the area that will hopefully start selling for dense multi-family buildings into the future.

    • What’s wrong with one and two family homes for people? Who cares whether they were built in the 90’s or early 2000’s? Their front yards keep cars off the streets.
      why would you wish these people to sell their homes?
      You’re encouraging people to flee and sell out so the neighborhood can gentrify at a faster pace and then rents will rise and longtime low income renters will be forced out.
      Just so you can have taller buildings?

      • You realize this neighborhood is LESS dense than it was 50+ years ago. Many of the older buildings housing multiple apartments were lost to neighborhood decline. The newer single and two-family squat boxes with the cars sitting in front house far fewer people and lead to underutilized urban land. Especially literally feet from a subway station. See the South Bronx. Give it time and nearly all of the low-density stuff built on the post-Fires wastelands will be returned to high density multi-family as housing demands make the land under these late-20th century builds more and more valuable. That’s how the market works. Are you saying that’s a bad thing? Many of these owners will likely welcome with open arms an offer for 2 million. Why wouldnt you. Are you suggesting that the humans moving in are somehow worse than the current occupants? If so please explain how you justify this point of view.

  3. Angel L Rodriguez | January 24, 2022 at 6:59 pm | Reply

    Iam 59 years old, i have cityfheps program with a voucher of 1900. For my self. My 📞 is 3479843581.thanks you.

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