Monday, March 24, 2014
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
Stop Work Order Wednesdays: Speculator East River Partners 342 10th Street 15 Day letter to revoke.
432 10th Street in South Park Slope (center with brown cornice) sold for $1,600,000 back in March 2012. |
A great deal of the building is making its way into the dumpster. Stop Work Violation posted. |
The owners and developers of 432 10th Street, the East River Partners have received the dreaded Department of Buildings complaint notice
Re+: BOROUGH COMMISSIONER HAS ISSUED A 15-DAY LETTER OF INTENT TO REVOKE APPLICATION NUMBER #340028543 ON 3/17/14. ISSUE DOB STOP WORK ORDER AND NOTE THE PERCENTAGE OF WORK COMPLETED.
Not sure what the Stop Work Order Violation was issued for but the application is under current review. The SWO violation paperwork is now posted on the fence but the website shows no DOB violations or Environmental Control Board violations or fines.
It could be something as simple as not filing all the correct paperwork like the Building Pavement Plan (BBP) or something much stinkier like a zoning issue or floor area kerfuffle.
As of today a proper construction fence is up and contractors have started demolishing the front facade by removing the wooden bay.
A tedious 10 minute scan of the building's DoB property profile tells us that this Alt 1? job is hoping to engorge both horizontally and vertically an additional 4,434 square feet. That's basically doubling what's there now.
They're getting two more floors on top as well as to push out into the rear yard. So the residential zoned R6B multifamily structure will go from a 3 to a 4 family and rise in height from 30 feet to 50 feet with permitted obstructions like bulkheads adding 10 feet more. There will be a new Certificate of Occupancy.
What complicates the buildable square feet equation some is that the developers have joined tax lots into a single zoning lot with their next door neighbor 430 10th Street. This is usually done to increase the total size of the new building, if it works. You can check out the zoning diagram below to see how the rear extension will line up to the neighboring properties.
Mezzanines...You heard me, there are going to be mezzanines with open floors looking out into the rear yard extension. I think when the DOB plan examiners see that on the plans their eyes spin around in their heads. This appears to also be a professionally self-certified job. That's like throwing gas on the fire.
Foundation excavation work will be required for the rear extension. It's looks like it's going to be a quadruple duplex with cellar recreation space.
The East River Partners have been getting a lot of press on how they have been aggressively investing in Brooklyn buying up non regulated multi-families for all cash and gut renovating them for the "bugaboo set". ER Partners paid $1.6 million for 432 10 Street back in March of 2012.
The Real Deal ran a story on them back in 2012.
Rendering: Christopher V. Papa Architect |
Zoning Documents |
4 dwelling units with Square Feet diagrammed |
Friday, March 14, 2014
Stop Work Order for 383 12th Street
The owners of 383 12th Street, a long vacant hole in the ground, started work on a 4 story, 40 foot tall, 8 unit building, but then were stopped by the Brooklyn Department of Buildings. Inspectors responding to a complaint apparently determined excavation for the building was encroaching on the neighboring property's foundation. Currently there are 17 open Environmental Control Board violations on the property, 9 of which are for work without permits. LINK |
Stop Work Order: 426 17th Street
426 17th Street Plans call for this diminutive 2 family to expand out through the roof with the existing attic converted to a full third floor. This Alt-1 job is being professionally certified by the architect. The Stop Work Order Violation was served after The Department of Buildings performed a compliancy audit and found work being done not according to approved plans. An Environmental Control Board Violation of $2,500 was served and paid by the contractor. Interesting note, this building will be fully sprinklered. |
Add caption |
Thursday, March 13, 2014
A Fourteenth Street Renovation: LOCALbrooklyn
14th Street South Slope Brooklyn:
L O C A L brooklyn Meret Lenzlinger Architect
Is this a trend in Park Slope South? I have noticed that in recent years quite a few two-family residential buildings in my neighborhood are being turned over by old timers and then converted into single families by their new owners. There are four houses on my block alone that have made the transformation. Back in the day, when the neighborhood was not so nice as they say, two family homes not occupied by their owners were often illegally sliced up into three units or more.
Is this just part of the gentrification process? Do new homeowners no longer need the additional income from a rental apartment to help pay their mortgage? Maybe they don't want the headache of being a landlord.
Or, maybe it's because a growing family needs the entire 2,300 (plus or minus) square feet these two story, basement, and cellar row houses can provide. The South Slope did vote to limit it's building boom recently by down zoning from R6 to R6B. The Floor Area Ratio (FAR) dropped from 2.43 to 2.00 with height and setback restrictions reducing the allowed buildable floor space and making it harder to add on stories to an existing home. With all the new multifamily residential development built in Brooklyn in the last decade, I wonder how many housing units have been lost to three and two-family down sizing?
Reducing Family Units to Increase Family Space
This house on 14th Street purchased back in November 2012 for $1,050,00 is doing just that. Architect Meret Lenzlinger of the firm LOCALbrooklyn has filed plans to change the certificate of occupancy from a two family to a one family. Plans also call for a small single story addition off the rear of the building. I think it is common for new home owners to move the kitchen to the basement garden level and then opening up the rear facade with glass to allow more light into what is usually a dark floor. There are a good number of residential renovations that can be seen on LOCALbrooklyn's website. Their portfolio shows many such kitchen spaces.
Looking forward to the restoration of the wood frame house. No doubt it will be a great addition to the street scape.
L O C A L brooklyn Meret Lenzlinger Architect
Is this a trend in Park Slope South? I have noticed that in recent years quite a few two-family residential buildings in my neighborhood are being turned over by old timers and then converted into single families by their new owners. There are four houses on my block alone that have made the transformation. Back in the day, when the neighborhood was not so nice as they say, two family homes not occupied by their owners were often illegally sliced up into three units or more.
Is this just part of the gentrification process? Do new homeowners no longer need the additional income from a rental apartment to help pay their mortgage? Maybe they don't want the headache of being a landlord.
Or, maybe it's because a growing family needs the entire 2,300 (plus or minus) square feet these two story, basement, and cellar row houses can provide. The South Slope did vote to limit it's building boom recently by down zoning from R6 to R6B. The Floor Area Ratio (FAR) dropped from 2.43 to 2.00 with height and setback restrictions reducing the allowed buildable floor space and making it harder to add on stories to an existing home. With all the new multifamily residential development built in Brooklyn in the last decade, I wonder how many housing units have been lost to three and two-family down sizing?
Reducing Family Units to Increase Family Space
This house on 14th Street purchased back in November 2012 for $1,050,00 is doing just that. Architect Meret Lenzlinger of the firm LOCALbrooklyn has filed plans to change the certificate of occupancy from a two family to a one family. Plans also call for a small single story addition off the rear of the building. I think it is common for new home owners to move the kitchen to the basement garden level and then opening up the rear facade with glass to allow more light into what is usually a dark floor. There are a good number of residential renovations that can be seen on LOCALbrooklyn's website. Their portfolio shows many such kitchen spaces.
Looking forward to the restoration of the wood frame house. No doubt it will be a great addition to the street scape.