Posted on 30 January 2010. Tags: 21123, condos, construction, development, Economy, greenwood heights, In the News, new york times, real estate, recession, South Brooklyn, sunset park
Finished, refurbished or just breaking ground, you can spot condominiums of all shapes and sizes around Sunset Park.
New buyers are moving in, a trend welcome or unhappy depending on who you ask. Either way, the phenomenon has come to South Brooklyn. An article in the real estate section of today’s New York Times gives a comprehensive view of condo-buying. Though meant for those on the market, it offers insight for others simply looking for an explanation about the trend, as well as the pros, cons and state of the market in a city where price-per-square foot has proven as riveting as the cost of oil.
Interested in the shifting market closer to home? Check out this article on issues of affordable housing in Sunset Park.
Posted in Economy, In the News, development, recession
Posted on 14 January 2010. Tags: 5th ave, American Community Survey, brooklyn, Carmen Vazquez, Community Board 7, condos, Corcoran Group, development, fifth avenue, Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy, galla condiminums, housing, jeremy laufer, John Wescott, NYU, Park Slope, poverty, real estate, rent, South Brooklyn, sunset park, Tarry Hum, Windsor Terrace

For 13 years the Vazquez family has watched Sunset Park change from the window of their three-bedroom apartment on 55th Street. This year, the shifting tides of New York real estate hit home.
Developer Galla Condominiums recently bought and converted to condominiums a dozen apartments in the 16-unit building at 546 55th Street where Carmen and Alex Vazquez live with their children. Each unit that goes up for sale marks one less rent-stabilized apartment in a neighborhood where such units are scarce.
As the number of rent stabilized units dwindle, long term residents find themselves living surrounded by housing that rents and sells at rates far beyond what many longtime and new immigrant residents in this working-class neighborhood can afford. Read the full story
Posted in Economy, Features, development