The affordable housing lottery has launched for 3377 Sedgwick Avenue, a six-story residential building in Jerome Park, The Bronx. Designed by Fred Geremia Architects & Planners and developed by Anton Tinaj under the Park View Bay, LLC, the structure yields 30 residences. Available on NYC Housing Connect are nine units for residents at 130 percent of the area median income (AMI), ranging in eligible income from $84,755 to $218,010.
Amenities include assigned parking spaces and a shared laundry room. Tenants are responsible for electricity including stove, heat, and hot water.
At 130 percent of the AMI, there are two studios with a monthly rent of $2,472 for incomes ranging from $84,755 to $161,590; four one-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $2,520 for incomes ranging from $86,400 to $181,740; and three two-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $2,795 for incomes ranging from $95,829 to $218,010.
Prospective renters must meet income and household size requirements to apply for these apartments. Applications must be postmarked or submitted online no later than October 21, 2024.
Subscribe to YIMBY’s daily e-mail
Follow YIMBYgram for real-time photo updates
Like YIMBY on Facebook
Follow YIMBY’s Twitter for the latest in YIMBYnews
Sad.
Imagination-free. All corners of the Bronx deserve better.
Very 1970s.
My Pena and Kahn law cases shortened.
Designing this thing sure took a lot of talent. That facade alone is brimming with such character so as to outshine everything for blocks around.
As bad as this is, it’s still somewhat better than the absolute garbage that littered the Bronx from the 80s til pretty recently
I’m constantly surprised though how so many of these new developments are astonishingly bad even in more desirable middle income beighborhoods like Jerome Park and Kingsbridge.
The Bronx is the boro for the poor and working classes. Much new architecture tells you so.
Many of these new developments with garbage architecture aren’t intended for the “poor” or working class, at least their asking rents don’t say so.
Plus that’s no excuse anyways. Good design should be a universal goal, regardless of whether its intended market is upper class or working class. Many garbage architects peddling schlock in the Bx seem to go out of their way to produce garbage designs. It’s shocking and discouraging. Such a beautiful borough being tortured by these hacks. Offending architects ought to lose their license.
affordable for who? again other people pockets
Agreed.
This isn’t from the 1970s?