Real Estate
SEE: Thousands Of Brooklyn NYCHA Apartments Get $434M Facelift
The massive project spanned 37 public housing buildings in Bed-Stuy, Crown Heights, Williamsburg and Gowanus.

BROOKLYN, NY — Thousands of public housing tenants had their apartments transformed in a $434-million city project, according to the city.
The two-year project — dubbed the "Brooklyn Bundle II" — brought full-scale upgrades to 37 buildings across nine New York City Housing Authority developments in the borough, spanning Bed-Stuy, Williamsburg, Crown Heights and Gowanus, officials said.
Its completion was celebrated Friday by Mayor Eric Adams, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, NYCHA and a development team that led the renovations.
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“The completion of these renovations opens a new chapter in the lives of 6,000 NYCHA families,” said HUD Regional Administrator Alicka Ampry-Samuel, who was previously a Brooklyn city council member. “All New Yorkers deserve to be proud of their home, and now they finally live in upgraded, safe apartments."
The large-scale upgrade was completed under a program known as Permanent Affordability Commitment Together, or PACT, which uses a federal dollars to finance capital needs in public housing buildings.
Find out what's happening in Prospect Heights-Crown Heightsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
This round of the program brought renovations to The Armstrong Houses and Weeksville Gardens in Crown Heights, Marcy Avenue-Greene sites in Bed-Stuy, a 200-unit building at 572 Warren Street in Gowanus and three developments in Williamsburg.
In total, 2,600 apartments home to more than 6,000 NYCHA residents had their kitchens, bathrooms, apartment electrical panels and flooring replaced, officials said.
The updates also included new roofs, elevators, windows, doors, plumbing fixtures, trash removal systems and upgrades to lobbies, facades and hallways for the buildings, officials said. Four developments got solar panels added to their roofs.
Check out some photos from the renovations here, provided by the PACT team:




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