Construction is rising on 9 5th Street, a five-story residential building in Gowanus, Brooklyn. Designed by Angelo Ng + Anthony Ng Architects Studio and developed by Michael Gendin of Titan Equity Group, the 8,675-square-foot structure will yield six condominium units with an average scope of 1,445 square feet. The project will also include a cellar level and a 38-foot-long rear yard. The property is located near the corner of 5th and Smith Streets.
The steel-framed superstructure stands two stories high behind the sidewalk shed, and crews are steadily assembling the inner and outer walls with cinder blocks.
The following photos from mid-March show the superstructure beginning to become visible.
No renderings have been released for the project apart from the below elevation diagram depicting the main southern elevation. The building will feature a lone setback at the fifth story and will culminate in a small roof deck lined with a metal railing. The façade appears to be composed of a mix of brick and smooth paneling surrounding a grid of rectangular windows and glass doors leading to balconies.
The property was formerly occupied by a surface-level parking lot and one two-story building at 15 5th Street, as seen in the below Google Street View image from before the start of demolition.
The nearest subways from the ground-up development are the F and G trains at the Carroll Street station to the north.
9 5th Street’s anticipated completion date is slated for the winter of 2027, as noted on site.
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Ugh.
It always amazes me how overdesigned structures are in NYC. In most other cities, this would be four floors of wood structure on a first floor concrete podium. Sprinklers throughout make it safer than a steel or concrete building without them.
And obviously this would make construction much less expensive and greener.