An affordable housing lottery has launched for 251 apartments in a two-building complex in Greenpoint dubbed The Riverie. Located on the banks of the East River, right behind the Greenpoint Ferry Terminal, the development is the latest Greenpoint tower to replace low-slung industrial brick warehouses.
Australian-based Lendlease, the owners of The Riverie at 18 India St., also 1 Java Place, faced pushback from local residents following their purchase of the large block-long site in 2020 for their management of the Greenpoint Ferry Terminal and labor issues during construction. The site is bound by India, Java, and West streets, and the East River, and includes the public access point to the ferry pier.

The housing lottery for the new 37-story, 834-unit development includes 251 studio, one-, and two-bedroom apartments that are all income restricted and rent stabilized. However, only 84 could be deemed actually affordable. Those are for families earning 70% of the Area Median Income, with income limits set between $56,503 and $117,390 for households of one to five people, according to the Housing Connect listing.
Lendlease purchased the large property in 2020 for $110.825 million through 1 Java Owner LLC from development firm JZ Capital Partners. Lendlease applied for the new-building permit in June 2021, but it wasn’t issued until June 2023, city records show. In the meantime, the firm demolished the single-story industrial building that took up the entirety of the site.
Used as a bottling facility and for storage including of gasoline, according to old certificates of occupancy, the property went through brownfield cleanup.

The location is part of the 2005 Williamsburg and Greenpoint rezoning and its Greenpoint-Willamsburg Inclusionary Housing Program. The project is being developed under the city’s Inclusionary Housing Program and is expected to qualify for the 421-a tax break.
The lottery closes March 28. To apply, visit the listing on New York City’s Housing Connect website.
This story first appeared on Brooklyn Paper’s sister site Brownstoner.