Articles by Vanessa Londono


301 Broome Street in the Lower East Side, Manhattan

Permits Filed for 301 Broome Street on Manhattan’s Lower East Side

Permits have been filed for a six-story mixed-use building at 301 Broome Street on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. Located between Eldridge Street and Forsyth Street, the interior lot is one block north of the Grand Street subway station, serviced by the B and D trains, and one block south of Bowery station, serviced by the J and Z trains. Winnie Lee under the 301 Broome Street LLC is listed as the owner behind the applications.

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150-13 89th Avenue in Jamaica, Queens

Permits Filed for 150-13 89th Avenue in Jamaica, Queens

Permits have been filed for an eight-story residential building at 150-13 89th Avenue in Jamaica, Queens. Located at the intersection of 153rd Street and 89th Avenue, the lot is near the Sutphin Boulevard subway station, serviced by the F train. Chetrit Group is listed as the owner behind the applications. In 2015, YIMBY reported the same developer’s proposed redevelopment of Mary Immaculate Hospital on the block-long site, a 16-story rental complex with 339 apartments.

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110-12 101st Avenue in Richmond Hill, Queens

Permits Filed for 110-12 101st Avenue in Richmond Hill, Queens

Permits have been filed for a five-story residential building at 110-12 101st Avenue in Richmond Hill, Queens. Located between 110th Street and 111th Street, the interior lot is two blocks north of the 111th Street subway station, serviced by the A train. Sukhjinder Singh under the 129-10 Atlantic Avenue LLC is listed as the owner behind the applications, and previously filed permits for a four-story, nine-unit mixed-use building at the same site.

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Rendering of 50 West 66th Street - Snøhetta

50 West 66th Street Gets Approval to Move Forward on the Upper West Side

A recent split 2-2 vote by the Board of Standards and Appeals upheld the city’s Department of Buildings’ approval for 50 West 66th Street, which will become the Upper West Side’s tallest building. Local NIMBY group Landmark West was defeated in its assertion that developer Extell wrongly used mechanical space to bump up the 775-foot-tall height of the project without taking into consideration floor area restrictions.

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