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BUSHWICK II (GROUPS A & C)

There are 11 lots grouped here:
  • BUSHWICK II (GROUPS A & C) (270 CENTRAL AVENUE). More details at ZOLA.
  • BUSHWICK II (GROUPS A & C) (251 CENTRAL AVENUE). More details at ZOLA.
  • BUSHWICK II (GROUPS A & C) (282 CENTRAL AVENUE). More details at ZOLA.
  • BUSHWICK II (GROUPS A & C) (269 CENTRAL AVENUE). More details at ZOLA.
  • BUSHWICK II (GROUPS A & C) (310 CENTRAL AVENUE). More details at ZOLA.
  • BUSHWICK II (GROUPS A & C) (291 CENTRAL AVENUE). More details at ZOLA.
  • BUSHWICK II (GROUPS A & C) (605 EVERGREEN AVENUE). More details at ZOLA.
  • BUSHWICK II (GROUPS A & C) (670 EVERGREEN AVENUE). More details at ZOLA.
  • BUSHWICK II (GROUPS A & C) (615 EVERGREEN AVENUE). More details at ZOLA.
  • BUSHWICK II (GROUPS A & C) (580 CENTRAL AVENUE). More details at ZOLA.
  • BUSHWICK II (GROUPS A & C) (690 EVERGREEN AVENUE). More details at ZOLA.
269 CENTRAL AVENUE, Brooklyn, 11221
Public Housing Restructuring
  • RAD/PACT - Converted to Section 8 Under Private Management

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NYCHA has to share most documents it has about this property under the New York State Freedom of Information Law (FOIL). Click to send them a request!

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What do we know about what NYCHA is doing or proposing here?

In 2011, Congress created a new way for housing authorities in cities around the country to convert their buildings from public housing to Project Based Section 8 via a program called Rental Assistance Demonstration (RAD). RAD is being used in cities around the country and advocates are organizing in response.

Instead of being owned by the housing authority, after RAD conversion developments will be owned by companies. Private developers own shares of these companies; housing authorities can own shares, too. This allows the authorities to draw on possibly more secure federal funding and to bring in private money invested by individuals and companies taking advantage of tax credits, bond issues and the possibility of making money from the rent that current and future tenants pay.

NYCHA will continue to own the land and lease it to a company shared by it and a private development partner that will own the buildings. Management will be done by a private company. NYCHA can control what the company does via the land lease and via its agreement with the private development partner. 

The key tenant protections that public housing residents have in New York survive a RAD conversion: 

  • all units in the converted development must remain permanently affordable (rent cannot exceed 30% of resident income)
  • residents continue to have the same succession opportunities 
  • grievance procedures 
  • residents retain the right to establish and operate a resident organization

Developers will be required to propose a plan to train and hire NYCHA residents, and proactively engage residents on a regular basis as the project moves forward.  

But that’s just the skeleton. The details are what will shape every resident’s experience of the conversion. 

Housing authorities need specific approval from HUD to put any federally-funded public housing into RAD. HUD requires a public housing authority to have meetings with twice residents before applying and to include resident comments in the application itself. After HUD gives a preliminary green light, the housing authority needs to include the conversion in a written Annual Plan or Amendment and receive comments from residents. But HUD’s approval is just one step in the process.  

Since the program was announced, residents and advocates in New York have been working with NYCHA to hammer out an implementation plan for NYC.

This development was approved for RAD conversion by HUD in 2017. 

  1. # of Current Units 299
  2. Total Number of Units 300
  3. Number of Rental Rooms 1,446
  4. Population - Section 8 Transition 0
  5. Population - Public Housing 716
  6. Total Population 716
  7. # of Families On Fixed Income 0
  8. % of Families on Fixed Income %
  9. # of Residential Buildings 25
  10. # of Non-Residential Buildings 0
  11. # of Stories 3
  12. Total Area (Sq Ft) 402,930.0
  13. Bldg/Land Coverage 25.46
  14. Density (Population/Acre) 77.0
  15. Development Cost $20,840,392.0
  16. Cost Per Rental Room (As Built) $14,235.0
  17. Avg. Monthly Gross Rent $607.0
  18. Senior Development no
  19. Electricity Paid By Residents yes
  20. RAD/PACT Status Construction Complete
  21. RAD/PACT Conversion Date July 18, 2019
  22. RAD/PACT Developers Pennrose Properties
  23. RAD/PACT General Contractor Procida Construction
  24. RAD/PACT Property Manager Pinnacle City Living
  25. RAD/PACT Social Service Provider Acacia Network (non-profit)

Who decides what happens to this property?

Official Owner

New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) (public)
Contact: David Pristin, Executive Vice President, External Affairs ((212) 306-3401 / David.Pristin@nycha.nyc.gov)

Urban Renewal

A portion of this property is part of the urban renewal plan Bushwick II.

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Key Contacts

City Council District 37 represented by Sandy Nurse
Community District Brooklyn 4 ( bk04@cb.nyc.gov / 718-628-8400 ), district manager: Nadine Whitted
Congressional District 7 represented by Nydia Velázquez
Find all elected officials for this lot at Who Represents Me? NYC

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