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Proposed Downtown Brooklyn tower could obstruct neighboring views, change landmark row

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The row on Duffield Street in October of 2024.
Photo by Susan De Vries

A developer who bought the landmarked row in Downtown Brooklyn known as the Duffield Street Houses is proposing to build a glassy 30-story tower in the petite backyard that will swallow up the back half of the houses and obscure windows of apartments in the converted BellTel Lofts on the other side of the block.

The proposal for 188 Duffield Street is headed for a public hearing at the Landmarks Preservation Commission Tuesday, Oct. 21. In May, Community Board 2 voted no on the plan, the Eagle was the first to report. A rendering of the design published by YIMBY in June shows a glass and beige brick tower with symmetrical window openings and a stepped facade.

The proposed tower.Rendering by Hill West Architects and Acheson Doyle Partners Architects via LPC

The developer, Watermark Capital, proposes to combine the interiors of the 19th century buildings and demolish their rear facades, according to the LPC and preservation nonprofit Historic Districts Council. At the CB2 meeting, HDC “strongly voiced our concern to CB2 and local elected officials that this precedent would suggest that every historic structure is only as meaningful as its facade, and thereby fair game to be window dressing for a tower,” the group said in an update about New York City landmarks at risk.