Housing Lottery Launches for 277 Throop Avenue in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn

277 Throop Avenue in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn via NYC Housing Connect

The affordable housing lottery has launched for 277 Throop Avenue, a four-story residential building in Bedford Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. Designed by Peter Klein Associates and developed by Ronen Ben-Josef, the structure yields eight residences. Available on NYC Housing Connect are three units for residents at 130 percent of the area median income (AMI), ranging in eligible income from $77,143 to $198,250.

Residences come with washers and dryers, air conditioning, hardwood floors, dishwashers, intercoms, and patios or balconies. Tenant are responsible for electricity which includes heat, and gas which includes stove and hot water.

At 130 percent of the AMI, there is one one-bedroom with a monthly rent of $2,250 for incomes ranging from $77,143 to $165,230; one one-bedroom with a monthly rent of $2,400 for incomes ranging from $82,286 to $165,230; and one two-bedroom with a monthly rent of $2,750 for incomes ranging from $94,286 to $198,250.

Prospective renters must meet income and household size requirements to apply for these apartments. Applications must be postmarked or submitted online no later than November 7, 2023.

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2 Comments on "Housing Lottery Launches for 277 Throop Avenue in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn"

  1. What a boring building,
    looks like there was a discount
    at “BRICKS R US”? 🤔🤣

  2. This is not affordable housing. I guess they want the working class and people constantly subjected to discrimination out of the city. They want them to stay on Welfare Programs, and New Deal, Programs, and allow a certain other group, class or kind all of access to any public or private Seneca in the city. Then they want to tell the poor and working class what kinds of housing to buy with their entitlements. So they are keeping the market in of certain incomes, and excluding other incomes as, well as races from access to freedom of renting, buying a house, or loving in a home they feel belongs to a certain group or class of people. The affordable housing is easy gentrification. Home Owners in the area,, including Health Care Workers will have to sell their private property to the friends of the upper Echelon building dwellers.

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