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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