Search Results for morris heights

Order results by date

Housing Lottery Launches for 2004 Davidson Avenue in Morris Heights, The Bronx

The affordable housing lottery has launched for 2004 Davidson Avenue, a six-story residential building in Morris Heights, The Bronx. The 24,768-square-foot development was designed by Asher Hershkowitz Architect and yields 34 units. Available on NYC Housing Connect are 11 units for residents at 80 to 130 percent of the area median income (AMI), ranging in eligible income from $39,703 to $159,640.

Read More


Revised rendering of 959 Sterling Place - Morris Adjmi Architects; Hope Street Capital

Updated Proposals Revealed for Residential Expansion at 959 Sterling Place in Crown Heights, Brooklyn

Updated renderings from Morris Adjmi Architects reveal scaled-back designs for a residential expansion at 959 Sterling Place in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. The building sits immediately in front of the Hebron Seventh Day Adventist School, originally completed in 1889 and designated a New York City landmark in 2011. Submitted design changes are a direct response to comments from the Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) following initial presentations in October 2020.

Read More

1641 Andrews Avenue. All photos courtesy of NYC Housing Connect

Housing Lottery Launches for 1641 Andrews Avenue in Morris Heights, The Bronx

The affordable housing lottery has launched for 1641 Andrews Avenue, a five-story residential development in Morris Heights, The Bronx. Built in 1925 and most recently renovated in 2016, the 55,750-square-foot building yields 61 units. Available on NYC Housing Connect are 21 units for residents at 120 percent of the area median income, ranging in eligible income from $28,663 to $180,120.

Read More

Affordable Housing Lottery Round-Up: Closings Imminent for Seven Buildings in The Bronx, Brooklyn, and Manhattan

Today’s housing lottery round-up features seven buildings in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and The Bronx with affordable units on Housing Connect with deadlines closing within the next seven days. Unfortunately, an update to the Housing Connect website this week has apparently left the system rather glitchy, as it now lists incorrect numbers of units remaining, and the photos and renderings have similarly become defunct, all in the midst of New York City’s worst housing crisis since the 1930s.

Read More