Clinton Hill

259 Washington Avenue

Condo Conversion Planned For Church At 259 Washington Avenue, Clinton Hill

Brookland Capital has purchased the 29,250 square-foot church at 259 Washington Avenue, in Clinton Hill, for $8.8 million, according to Commercial Observer. The site has 2,650 square feet of air rights, and plans call for church to be converted into condominiums, featuring a small rear expansion and exterior restorations. DNAinfo reports the property is landmarked, so changes to the building will have to be approved by the LPC. The G train stop at Washington Avenue is located two blocks to the south.


132 Waverly Avenue

Four-Story, Four-Unit Condo Project Filed At 132 Waverly Avenue, Clinton Hill

Greenwich Village-based Wavbuilders, LLC, has filed applications for a four-story, four-unit residential building at 132 Waverly Avenue, in northern Clinton Hill, four blocks from the G train’s stop at Washington Avenue. The building will measure 6,210 square feet in total, and full-floor units will likely be condominiums, averaging 1,552 square feet each. Clinton Hill-based Brent Porter & Associates is the applicant of record.



72 Clifton Place

Four-Story, Two-Unit Townhouse Coming To Vacant 72 Clifton Place, Clinton Hill

Property owner Nir Sapir has filed applications for a four-story, two-unit residential building at 72 Clifton Place, in Clinton Hill, a block away from Classon Avenue G train stop. The townhouse will measure 3,600 square feet, and 1,800 square-foot residential units will occupy the bottom and upper halves. Oscar Fuertes’ Bayside-based OMF Architecture is designing.


45 Irving Place

Four-Story, Three-Unit Residential Building Coming To 45 Irving Place, Clinton Hill

Property owner Yaniv Zohar, doing business as Z-Group Holding Corp., has filed applications for a four-story, three-unit residential building at 45 Irving Place, in southern Clinton Hill, four blocks from the C train’s Franklin Avenue stop. The building will measure 4,832 square feet, and triplex units will measure an average 1,610 square feet. Williamsburg-based Adi Gershoni is the architect of record, and an existing two-story structure must first be demolished.


Fetching more...