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Cooperatives have a long history in metropolitan New York – in November 1882, Harper's Magazine describes several cooperative apartment buildings already in existence, with plans to build more [37] – and can be found throughout New York City, Westchester County, which borders the city to the north, and towns in northern New Jersey that are ...
United Workers Cooperative Colony (1927–1929), 339 + 385 units, on Allerton Avenue on the Bronx, sponsored by communist garment industry workers; known as "The Communist Coops" Dunbar Apartments, built by John D. Rockefeller Jr. in 1928 as a housing cooperative to provide housing for African Americans. Bankrupt in 1936 and taken over by ...
Apartment buildings in Newark, New Jersey (10 P) Pages in category "Apartment buildings in New Jersey" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total.
Currently, the second biggest student housing co-op in the world is Berkeley Student Cooperative, formerly known as the University Students Cooperative Association, in Berkeley, CA with 1250 students living in 17 houses and 3 apartment complexes. Other large-scale co-op systems include MSU Student Housing Cooperative of Michigan State ...
Lotteries opened for three co-op buildings in the East Village. (NYC Housing Connect) The cluster of properties includes four studios priced at $260,582, 14 two-bedroom apartments at $334,556 and ...
Cohousing provides self-contained private dwellings (often houses but sometimes apartments), often owned by the resident, but sometimes rented. Co-living on the other hand may have independent units within the same building (apartments or rooms), which are often rented. However, none of these are exclusive, thus the potential overlaps.
The Amalgamated Housing Cooperative is a limited-equity cooperative in New York City. Organized by the Amalgamated Clothing Workers (ACW), a Manhattan-based socialist labor union, the co-op's original cluster of Tudor-style buildings was erected at the southern edge of Van Cortlandt Park in 1927. Additional buildings were added in the post ...
Notable apartment complexes developed with Mitchell-Lama funding include the Dayton Towers, Manhattan Plaza, the Cadman Plaza, Co-op City, and the 1199 Plaza. [9] According to the New York State Homes and Community Renewal (formerly DHCR), "A total of 269 Mitchell-Lama developments with over 105,000 apartments were built under the program." [10]