34 SEPTEMBER 28, 2017 RIDGEWOOD  TIMES WWW.QNS.COM 
 Ridgewood Times Sales Guide 
 Listings selected at random. Courtesy MLSLI 
 RIDGEWOOD 
 Greene Avenue 79th Stree 56th Road 75th Street 
 Under $500,000 
 63-15 Forest Avenue 
 $495,000 
 Condo 
 1 bedroom, 1 bathroom 
 Derek Eisenberg 
 Continental Real Estate Group 
 $500,000-900,000 
 68-22 60th Street 
 $886,000 
 2-family home 
 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms 
 Gobinda Lama 
 Crifasi Real Estate 
 Over $900,000 
 1817 Greene Avenue 
 $1,150,000 
 2-family home 
 7 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms 
 Hyun Sook Chung 
 East Coast Realtors 
 GLENDALE 
 Under $500,000 
 90-50 Union Turnpike 
 $375,000 
 Co-op 
 3 bedrooms, 1 ½ bathrooms 
 David Kueber 
 Coldwell Banker Kueber Realty 
 $500,000-900,000 
 76-07 79th Street 
 $669,000 
 2-family home 
 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms 
 Gabriele Kapp 
 Werba Realty  
 Over $900,000 
 89-15 Doran Avenue 
 $1,255,000 
 2-family contemporary 
 7 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms 
 Patrick Hennessy 
 Exit Kingdom Realty 
 MASPETH 
 Under $500,000 
 52-21 65th Place 
 $210,000 
 Co-op 
 1 bedroom, 1 bathroom 
 Gulnara Cotiga 
 Landmark International R E LLC 
 $500,000-900,000 
 60-67 71st Street 
 $773,900 
 1-family home 
 3 bedrooms, 1 ½ bathrooms 
 Andrew LaSala 
 Crifasi Real Estate 
 Over $900,000 
 59-45 56th Road 
 $1,050,000 
 2-family home 
 6 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms 
 Davin Chaltu 
 New Concept NY Realty  
 MIDDLE VILLAGE 
 Under $500,000 
 71-49 Metropolitan Avenue 
 $450,000 
 Condo 
 1 bedroom, 1 bathroom 
 Marisa VanWinckle 
 NY Metro Realty Group 
 $500,000-900,000 
 66-27 75th Street 
 $799,000 
 1-family duplex 
 3 bedrooms, 1 ½ bathrooms 
 Huang Kuo 
 RE/MAX Team 
 Over $900,000 
 66-09 77th Place 
 $999,000 
 1-family Tudor 
 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms 
 Vincent Musca 
 Century 21 Amiable Realty Group II 
 REAL ESTATE 
 RBSCC gets rebranded with a new name 
 BY ANTHONY GIUDICE 
 AGIUDICE@RIDGEWOODTIMES.COM 
 @A_GIUDICEREPORT 
 The Ridgewood Bushwick Senior  
 Citizens Council (RBSCC), one of  
 the largest nonprofi  ts serving  
 both communities on the Brooklyn/ 
 Queens border, recently changed its  
 name to better showcase its expanded  
 reach amidst a rebranding eff ort aft er  
 41 years of servicing the community. 
 RBSCC will now be known as Rise- 
 Boro  Community  Partnership,  and  
 the new name was announced at the  
 organization’s 41st Annual Gala earlier  
 this month. 
 “I  am  thrilled  to  be  a  part  of  the  
 talented leadership team at RiseBoro  
 during this exciting time,” said Scott  
 Short, chief operating offi    cer, RiseBoro  
 Community Partnership. “Building upon  
 our 41-year heritage as Ridgewood  
 Bushwick Senior Citizens Council, we  
 begin today to write a new chapter as  
 RiseBoro Community Partnership.” 
 Short believes this rebranding will  
 allow  RiseBoro  to  draw  additional  
 resources to help communities thrive. 
 The  RiseBoro  team  feels  the  rebranding  
 was needed to better communicate  
 the nonprofi  t’s vast array of  
 programs and work it does within the  
 communities it serves.  
 Although  it  started  out  by  offering  
 social  services  to  the  seniors  of  
 Ridgewood and Bushwick, the former  
 RBSCC has expanded to serve people of  
 all ages across many diff erent communities  
 in Brooklyn and Queens. 
 The “Rise” in RiseBoro is meant to  
 represent the progress of a growing  
 community.  The  “Boro”  represents  
 the nonprofi  t organization’s New York  
 City roots, and the capital “R” and “B”  
 in  the  name  recognizes  RiseBoro’s  
 heritage  allows  for  a  unifying  subbrand  
 for each of their fi ve divisions:  
 RB Seniors, RB Housing, RB Education,  
 RB Health and RB Empowerment. 
 “This rebranding is a better refl ection  
 of what we do, which is to unleash the  
 power and viability of a community by  
 tapping into a neighborhood's assets  
 through services like aff ordable housing,” 
  said Maria Viera, VP of Community  
 Aff  airs. “It is a holistic approach, which  
 is demonstrated in our fi ve divisions  
 and ensures no family is left  behind.” 
 RiseBoro feels that addressing the  
 problems of a low-income community  
 can be eff  ectively executed through  
 a  combination  of  social  services  
 and  community  development.  The  
 nonprofi  t’s mission is to “unleash the  
 potential of communities to thrive, no  
 matter that odds.” 
 To learn more about RiseBoro, visit  
 their website at www.riseboro.org. 
 Photo via Google Maps 
 The Ridgewood Bushwick Senior  
 Citizens Council now has a new  
 name.