New renderings have been revealed for Bower Brooklyn, a 13-story residential building under construction at 2683 Atlantic Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. Designed by Isaac & Stern Architects and developed by Wyton Developers, the structure will yield 229 two-bedroom rental units and 30,000 square feet of amenities. The property is located at the corner of Atlantic and New Jersey Avenues.
The renderings show a rectangular massing with a distinctive zigzagging form composed of angular, pleated columns. The façade will be composed of light gray brick surrounding floor-to-ceiling windows with black metal spandrels. New sidewalks with trees will surround the ground level, and a glass railing will line the perimeter of the flat roof.
The property was formerly occupied by a row of low-rise structures along Atlantic Avenue, as seen in the below Google Street View image from before their demolition. Only the two-story property at the corner of Vermont Street was left standing.
The following interior renderings preview a typical kitchen and bathroom.
Amenities will include a lobby with a mailroom, a rooftop swimming pool, fitness center with a sauna and steam room, a coworking lounge, an inner garden, and a separate outdoor courtyard. There will also be a children’s playroom, a game lounge, golf simulator room, cinema, karaoke room, pet spa, and a communal laundry room.
The nearest subways from the ground-up development are the J and Z trains at the Alabama Avenue station and the C train at the Liberty Avenue station. Also nearby is the East New York station on the Long Island Rail Road.
Bower Brooklyn’s anticipated completion date is slated for June 2026.
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This is a second interesting facade today. There seems to be some sort of creature in the bathtub. The laundry room is nice, but more folding tables would be in order for a place this size. Also, some benches there woould be appreciated.
It is an interesting design. The PTACs seem to only exist in the daytime. Hmm.
in such a densely packed area, why no parking garage?
Probably not meant for people with cars as it’s a block away each from two MTA stations
I just passed by that site, it’s no way near complete for them to say June. It’s still a skeleton, I’ll say by the end of the summer around October the latest.
Not too shabby, not too shabby indeed😅. Aesthetically it reminds me a little of “Lantern House” @ 515 W. 18th St, in Chelsea near the High Line 👍.
Beautiful design.