
BY BEN BRACHFELD
Hundreds of new affordable
housing units have come
to Brownsville, thanks to local
do-gooders who paid millions
to develop the long-time-coming
Ebenezer Plaza development.
The fi rst phase of the project
opened Friday atop two
lots — one at 672 Powell St. and
the other at 96 New Lots Ave,
housing a combined 315 units
of affordable housing units.
The units at 672 Powell St.
are reserved for households
with earnings below 60 percent
of the Area Median Income,
as defi ned by the federal
Department of Housing and
Urban Development.
The housing lottery for that
building opened in February
2020, with studios going for as
little as $367 per month, while
the most expensive three-bedrooms
rented at $1,472.
The other building on the
block, 96 New Lots Ave, is targeted
COURIER L 30 IFE, OCT. 29-NOV. 4, 2021
at a slightly-higher 80 percent
of the AMI. The cheapest
studios rent for $362 per month,
while the most expensive threebedrooms
are going for $2,037.
Unlike most other developments
with affordable units,
there are no market rate apartments
in the complex, as the organization
behind the project,
the Church of God of East Flatbush,
specifi cally conjured up
the idea to help local residents,
rather than turn a profi t.
The church purchased the
lot in 2011 for $8.18 million and
sold it in 2016 to an LLC for
$12.6 million with the intention
of developing it as 100 percent
affordable, according to
city property records.
Ebenezer Plaza Owner LLC
is made up of the church, along
with affordable housing developers
Brisa Builders Corporation,
Procida Companies, and
Evergreen City LLC.
After the sale, the owners
then sought and won a rezoning
A rendering of Ebenezer Plaza. The two buildings in front are now open. Rendering by Perkins Eastman
needed for the project to
proceed.
The buildings were designed
by the architecture
fi rm Perkins Eastman.
The Church of God will be
opening a new, 40,000 square
foot church on-site, nestled
between the two buildings in
both ground-fl oor and basement
space. The new digs, expected
to open this coming
spring, are quadruple the size
of the Church’s current home
on E. 95th Street.
The development also includes
about 7,500 square feet
of ground-fl oor retail space.
A second phase of the project
is currently under construction,
and is expected to
bring an additional 200 belowmarket
rate units to the area.
The size of the project
marks a boost to Mayor Bill
de Blasio’s plan to build at
least 300,000 affordable housing
units by 2026, as will other
large scale proposals, such as
the proposed Gowanus Rezoning,
and the heated proposal
to change the land use rules in
Manhattan’s SoHo, which both
fi gure to bring hundreds of
new below-market-rate units
to their respective areas.
Massive affordable
housing development
opens in Brownsville