Affordable Housing Lottery Launches for 1985 Honeywell Avenue in West Farms, The Bronx

1985 Honeywell Avenue in West Farms, The Bronx via NYC Housing Connect

The affordable housing lottery has launched for 1985 Honeywell Avenue, an eight-story mixed-use building in West Farms, The Bronx. Designed by Fred Geremia Architects & Planners and developed by Durgaj Properties, the structure yields 33 residences. Available on NYC Housing Connect are 10 units for residents at 130 percent of the area median income (AMI), ranging in eligible income from $60,000 to $187,330.

Amenities include assigned parking spaces, bike storage, elevator, digital intercom system, a shared laundry room, and storage. Tenants are responsible for electricity.

At 130 percent of the AMI, there are two studios with a monthly rent of $1,750 for incomes ranging from $60,000 to $138,840; six one-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $1,850 for incomes ranging from $63,429 to $156,130; and two two-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $2,000 for incomes ranging from $68,572 to $187,330.

Prospective renters must meet income and household size requirements to apply for these apartments. Applications must be postmarked or submitted online no later than June 21, 2022.

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8 Comments on "Affordable Housing Lottery Launches for 1985 Honeywell Avenue in West Farms, The Bronx"

    • The building is just waiting for a facade…..kinda like a Romanesque Church that ran out of $$ – its just the structure that holds the facade.

      • All of this firms work is almost unimaginably bad, like they’re going out of their way to create something offensive and thoughtless. Them, Badaly and a few others degrade the city’s landscape when it really isn’t hard to design a pleasant looking, even if mediocre fade-into-the-background, building. It’s just hard to imagine how any of these hacks actually graduated from design programs. The city ought to ban them.

  1. Housing as a warehouse.

  2. William Suarez | June 2, 2022 at 5:46 pm | Reply

    Is it also for people on SSD, low income families

  3. Even poor people need thoughtful design. Another pathetic Bronx building.

  4. Hurray!
    More Buildings!
    More People!
    More Density!
    More Traffic on our streets, subways and busses, etc.,
    While our fragile infrastructure
    continues to crumble.

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