Ozone Park

86-15 Rockaway Boulevard in Ozone Park, Queens. All photos courtesy of NY Housing Connect

Housing Lottery Launches for 86-15 Rockaway Boulevard in Ozone Park, Queens

The affordable housing lottery has launched for 86-15 Rockaway Boulevard, a four-story residential building in Ozone Park, Queens. The 13,900-square-foot development is designed by Lu Ning Architecture and yields 20 units. Available on NYC Housing Connect are six units for residents at 130 percent of the area median income, ranging in eligible income from $54,858 to $159,640.

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86-15 Rockaway Boulevard in Ozone Park, Queens

New Residential Building Coming to 86-15 Rockaway Boulevard in Ozone Park, Queens

Permits have been filed for a four-story residential building at 86-15 Rockaway Boulevard in Ozone Park, Queens. Located on the northwest corner of 87th Street and Rockaway Boulevard, the upcoming development is situated five blocks north of the 88 Street-Boyd Avenue subway station, serviced by the A train. Devinder Singh is listed as the owner behind the applications.

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84-20 102nd Avenue

Twin Three-Story, Three-Unit Residential Buildings Coming to 84-20 102nd Avenue, Ozone Park

Flushing-based FK Construction has filed applications for two three-story, three-unit residential buildings at 84-20 and 84-22 102nd Avenue, in Ozone Park. The buildings will each measure 4,547 square feet. Across both, the full-floor residential apartments should average 1,106 square feet apiece, indicative of units with family-sized configurations. There will be a total five off-street parking spaces, two of which will be housed in garages. Frank J. Quatela’s Flushing-based firm is the architect of record. The 5,311-square-foot lot is occupied by a two-story house. Demolition permits have not been filed.

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89-19 Liberty Avenue, image via Google Maps

Permits Filed: 89-19 Liberty Avenue, Ozone Park

Ozone Park, a sprawling neighborhood in southern Queens, remains a working-class immigrant stronghold. Longtime Italian homeowners mingle with a fast-growing South Asian and Latino community, and many of the neighborhood’s new arrivals come from India, Bangladesh, Colombia, and Ecuador.

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