Construction Nears Completion on 89 Throop Avenue in South Williamsburg, Brooklyn

Photo by Michael Young

Construction is drawing to a close on 89 Throop Avenue, a five-story mixed-use residential and religious building in the Broadway Triangle section of South Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Designed by S. Wieder Architect and developed by Chaim Deutsch, the 55-foot-tall structure will span 30,344 square feet and yield 24 rental units with an average scope of 870 square feet, as well as 9,444 square feet of community facility space, a cellar level, 12 open parking spaces, and 12 enclosed parking spaces. The property is located at the intersection of Bartlett Street and Throop Avenue and was formerly occupied by two low-rise commercial buildings.

Recent photographs show the building clad in beige stone with a fenestration of arched windows with black mullions, and cornices and balconies with ornamental metal railings and decorative supports. Some plastic barriers and plywood boards remain around the ground floor as work wraps up on the main entrance, which sits behind two large arched cutouts at the western corner. Additional arched windows can be seen within, framed with stone blocks topped with keystones.

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

Photo by Michael Young

The nearest subways from the property are the J, M, and Z trains at the Flushing Avenue station to the southeast along Broadway.

YIMBY expects 89 Throop Avenue to finish construction sometime this fall.

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9 Comments on "Construction Nears Completion on 89 Throop Avenue in South Williamsburg, Brooklyn"

  1. Bravo
    Beautiful design
    A pleasure to view…..

  2. The quality is obvious. The actual architecture? Welllllll…

  3. David in Bushwick | September 8, 2024 at 11:23 am | Reply

    Wow!

  4. I wish all new buildings in New York could show their respect for the past, and for context, and look this good.

  5. David : Sent From Heaven. | September 9, 2024 at 3:50 am | Reply

    Well, I don’t hate beautiful things, this decoration is suitable for the festival of love: Thanks.

  6. Beautiful. So we can build beautiful developers!!! This is proof.

  7. Well it’s different. Ugly as hell, but different.

  8. It’s not horrible, but it’s far from beautiful.

  9. Well at least they tried, even if the proportions are god-awful.

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