
 
		12 
 BROOKLYN WEEKLY, DECEMBER 1, 2019 
 BY ROSE ADAMS 
 A  new  affordable  housing  
 development  catering  to  downand 
 out  veterans  of  the  US  
 Armed  Forces  opened  its  doors  
 on  Wednesday,  bringing  135  
 below-market-rate  units  to  the  
 People’s Playground.  
 Surf  Vets  Place,  located  on  
 the corner of W. 21st Street and  
 Surf  Avenue,  offers  82  units  
 for  formerly  homeless  veterans  
 and  53  affordable  units  to  
 residents who make between 50  
 and 60 percent  of  the area median  
 income for New York City,  
 which is $96,100 for a family of  
 three. 
 According to developers,  the  
 complex  is  one  of  the  largest  of  
 its kind in the borough.  
 “There’s  nothing  quite  like  
 this,”  said  Ralph  Fasano,  the  
 executive  director  of  Concern  
 for  Independent  Living,  the  organization  
 that  worked  with  
 the  city’s  Department  of  Veterans  
 Services  to  administer  the  
 apartments for the vets. “There’s  
 some scattered veteran housing  
 around  right  now,  but  not  on  a  
 scale like this.”  
 The veterans’ units will cost  
 tenants  30  percent  of  their  adjusted  
 gross  income,  and  the  
 other  affordable  apartments  go  
 for anywhere between $929 and  
 $1289  per month,  said  a  rep  for  
 Georgica  Green  Ventures,  the  
 building’s developer.   
 Eligible  veterans  were  referred  
 to  the  Concern  for  Independent  
 Living through veteran  
 shelter  system  and  associated  
 providers,  Fasano  said,  while  
 tenants  for  the  affordable  units  
 applied through the city’s Housing  
 Connect  platform  online,  
 and were selected through a lottery. 
  All the units are currently  
 fi lled,  and  there  are  57  applicants  
 on  the waitlist  for  the  affordable  
 units. 
 The nine-story building also  
 includes nearly two football  
 fi elds  worth  of  retail  space  on  
 its  ground  fl oor,  which  Fasano  
 said  would  be  occupied  by  one  
 or  two  commercial  tenants  —  
 most  likely  a  boutique  grocery  
 store or a community organization, 
   such  as Brownsville Community  
 Culinary Center.  
 The  property’s  architect,  
 the  Stephen  B.  Jacobs  Group,  
 fi led plans for the tower back in  
 April  2016  and  planned  to  open  
 up  the  building  by  Jan.,  2019,  
 but  construction  delays  pushed  
 the opening back to Nov. 20, Fasano  
 said.  
 When  the  complex  did  fi - 
 nally open  its doors,  local  leaders  
 lauded  it as one of  the most  
 modern affordable housing complexes  
 in the area. 
 “This  is  the  most  beautiful  
 affordable housing development  
 in Coney Island,  and this  
 sets  an  important  tone  for  the  
 rest  of  the  development  that  
 is  coming  to  our  community,”  
 said  Councilman  Mark  Treyger  
 (D–Coney  Island)  at  the  
 ribbon-cutting.  “We  can  point  
 to  this  beautiful  residence  and  
 say  this  is  the  standard,  and  
 that all of our residents deserve  
 nothing less.” 
 Surf Vets Place was required  
 A new affordable housing complex opened in Coney Island on Nov. 20.   
   Photo by Peter Scheer 
 to  include  affordable  units  because  
 it  sits  within  the  special  
 Coney  Island  District,  a  product  
 of  the  area’s  2009  rezoning,  
 which  mandates  that  builders  
 set  aside  35  percent  of  units  in  
 complexes  within  the  district  
 for  families  who  earn  between  
 51 percent and 120 percent of the  
 area’s median income. 
 Affordable housing for homeless  
 veterans opens in Coney Island