REBNY 421-A Building Analysis
REBNY 421-A Building Analysis
Some of the projects included here consist of multiple phases or buildings, and some parts of the development may be further
advanced than others. In these cases, only those units that have not yet vested in the 421-a program are included in the figures,
and those units already in construction and that have secured the 421-a partial tax exemption have been omitted from totals.
ANALYSIS OF PROJECTED 421-A HOUSING PRODUCTION |
Borough
Total Units
Affordable Units
Queens
Brooklyn
1,000
209
714
143
Manhattan
1,028
224
Astoria Cove
Queens
1,723
460
Domino
Brooklyn
2,300
700
Essex Crossing2
Manhattan
900
400
Brooklyn
5,500
1,400
Hallets Point
Queens
2,400
480
Pacific Park
Brooklyn
3,720
1,468
19,285
5,484
Greenpoint Landing
Total
BACKGROUND
The 421-a program has long been an integral component of the Citys strategy for producing new marketrate, middle income and affordable housing. Since its creation in 1971, however, the program has
undergone many modifications as the economy and housing market have evolved.
In the early 1970s, the sole intent of the 421-a program was to encourage the construction of new
housing. When the Citys economy and housing market was recovering from the fiscal crisis of the 1970s,
the program was modified in the early 1980s to capitalize on the growth of the housing market in
Manhattan.
A Geographic Exclusion Area (GEA) was created from roughly 96th Street to Houston Street that
restricted the 421-a benefit to projects that included affordable housing on site or that purchased
negotiable certificates. The negotiable certificate programwhich was established in 1984 and
administered by HPDissued certificates to a builder for the completion of new affordable housing
anywhere in the City that was built in accordance with the programs requirements. The low-income
builder would then sell the certificates to a market-rate builder to allow a market-rate project in the GEA to
qualify for a tax exemption.
In the midst of the economic slowdown in the early 1990s, the City further amended the 421-a program to
spur new market-rate and affordable housing, introducing a twenty-year benefit for projects that included
20 percent on-site affordable housing available for households earning up to 80 percent of AMI.
In 2008, as the economy and the Citys housing market were crashing, the City and State again amended
the 421-a program to dramatically reduce the availability of benefits, eliminate the negotiable certificate
program and expand the GEA. Given that many multi-family rental housing developments now pay more
than 30 percent of their gross revenue to taxes, the partial and temporary tax relief provided by the 421-a
program continues to be critical to alleviate the high tax burden and allow new housing to be built.
2
3
Excludes Site 6, which is planned as 100 units of affordable housing for seniors but is not eligible for 421-a.
These figures represent the entire scope of the project, including some buildings that are already under construction.
ANALYSIS OF PROJECTED 421-A HOUSING PRODUCTION |
CONCLUSION
With the population of New York City expected to reach nine million people in 2040, new housing must be
produced even more quickly than it is today just to keep up with demand, let alone to reduce the strain on
the housing market. The de Blasio administration is proposing to build 80,000 affordable housing units in
the next ten years, and projections show that an additional 100,000 new market-rate units will be needed
to satisfy the Citys expected growth. While necessary, this level of housing production is ambitious. Its
likelihood of success is greatly imperiled if the 421-a program is not renewed.
In order to reach its goal of constructing 80,000 new affordable housing units in ten years, an average of
8,000 units per year must be built. The 5,484 affordable units included in this analysis represent over 68%
of the units that would need to be produced in a given year. Even assuming these units will be
constructed over a few years, this loss would be a significant hit to the Citys housing program, especially
since the projects included in this report have already gone through various time-consuming approvals
processes. The time needed for new projects to go through the development, design and approvals
process would make it very unlikely for the City to replace these lost units before 2024.
The shortage of rental housing in New York City dates back to just after World War II, with the combination of returning war
veterans and the decline in housing production during the war years. The City has been under an official housing emergency
with vacancy rates of less than five percent since 1974, and this housing emergency has been renewed every three years since its
initial declaration.
The Citys housing needs continue to evolve each year as the population and real estate market changes,
and as with any program, 421-a should continue to evolve along with it. Any changes to the program will
of course affect how and where new housing is built, but as long as these changes are made thoughtfully
and deliberatively, housing developers will likely be able to work within the new regulations.
A wholesale loss of the 421-a program, however, would be devastating to the production of multi-family
rental housing, including middle income and affordable units, and would leave the City with skyrocketing
property tax levies under which the housing market would be hard-pressed to operate successfully.