
Eric Adams will receive 3,000 new New York City Airport.
He flows with housing.
Coins, under the quagmire airport site, which was abandoned in College Point, will obtain 3,000 new homes under a plan announced by Mayor Eric Adams on Monday.
The construction is expected to start in 2028, with New York City Building unions provides both work money and pensions to finance the project.
“Housing is required, and this project will rebuild and will achieve energy and housing to the Point College,” Adams said during an event on the site.
The advertisement was part of the “Housing Week” in the city hall, which Hizzoner started on Monday with “MTV CRIBS”-video similar From Gracie Mansion that attracted escape from X.
The Snarky posters that seized the tour – including the reference to the “peak” clip from the inside, also accused the correct “peek” – a mayor of trying to steal thunder from his main opponent in the elections, socialist Zahran Mamdani, which often highlights slow housing Tiktok videos.
The Adams batch, which lasted for a week to highlight the successes of his administration in housing-such as changing the division of “Yes City” is expected to build 80,000 new homes over 15 years-at a time when New York residents face record rents and housing supply crisis.
An executive order signed by Adams, which allows for more housing on the city -owned sites to partially led to the Flushing Airport project.
An area of 80 acres has returned largely to wetlands since the airport was turned off in 1984.
However, the city’s economic development company got the ball to redevelop the site by submitting an application for the proposal in November.
Officials said the project will be led by housing in the workforce in the city and the LCOR Incorporated, which plans to use sustainable design elements such as building group wood.
The housing will be built on approximately 20 acres and will be combined in the “modern wetland environment” with nature, passengers, open space prospects and wildlife habitats, according to officials.
Nearly 60 acres will be allocated only to public parks.
“What will be done here is to take 20 acres along the street and create 3000 units for workers in New York,” said Cirrus’s administrative partner, Joseph McDONEL. “This is the teachers, policemen, firefighters, nurses-people who if you already look at the statistics today, some of them move from Biconus and Pennsylvania-and to provide them with high-quality generous housing surrounded by 60 acres of wetlands that will not be enjoyed not only by the current residents.
“Therefore, a victory for everyone.”
Adams also attended a pioneer in the third and final stage of another development project that would bring 3,500 new populations to Coney Island Total.
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