Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 13
Monitor Point Finalizes 1,300 Brooklyn Apartments as Flood-Protection Parkland Lags
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 13

Monitor Point Finalizes 1,300 Brooklyn Apartments as Flood-Protection Parkland Lags

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 13

Summary

  • Plans for Monitor Point have been finalized, clearing the way for more than 1,300 apartments and a 600-foot tower beside Bushwick Inlet in Brooklyn.
  • The project advances New York City's push to ease a housing shortage, but it sharpens a local fight over whether vulnerable waterfront land should prioritize dense housing or flood-buffering open space.
  • Only about a third of the more than 25 acres of promised parkland has opened after 20 years, while much of the former gas-and-oil site remains fenced off with contaminated soil.
  • The contrast at Bushwick Inlet — a newly opened cove park next to a massive residential project — has become a broader test of how New York balances housing growth with climate resilience.

Insights

With a tower set to rise, will Brooklyn’s promised waterfront park ever be truly complete?
Can 662 affordable apartments justify building a high-rise in a designated flood zone?