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Wyckoff Gardens
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Wyckoff Gardens Houses: Public Housing at the Center of Boerum Hill’s Gentrification

  • January 6, 2026
  • Minhaj Sahil
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Wyckoff Gardens is a NYCHA development located in Brooklyn’s Boerum Hill neighborhood, bounded by Third Avenue, Nevins Street, and Wyckoff Street. Built in 1966, the complex consists of a row of three raised buildings and is home to approximately 1,100 residents.

Wyckoff Gardens is notable among NYCHA developments for its location within one of Brooklyn’s most rapidly gentrifying areas, surrounded by luxury high-rises, new restaurants, and strong access to public transportation. Despite the transformation surrounding it, Wyckoff Gardens remains home primarily to low-income residents, preserving affordable housing in a neighborhood where such options are increasingly disappearing.

Smaller in scale than many NYCHA developments, Wyckoff Gardens has nonetheless faced ongoing challenges common to public housing citywide, including aging infrastructure, outdated heating systems, and slow maintenance response times.

The complex was among the first selected for NYCHA’s NextGeneration public-private partnership program, which allows private development on NYCHA land in exchange for funding repairs—an initiative that has generated controversy and concern among tenants.

In response, resident leaders and tenant organizations have mobilized to ensure that residents’ voices are included in discussions around redevelopment and neighborhood change.

Despite ongoing uncertainty, Wyckoff Gardens stands as a testament to perseverance amid shifting city priorities and development pressures. The complex has housed multiple generations of families, many of whom continue to contribute to the surrounding community and local economy.

In a city defined by constant reinvention, Wyckoff Gardens exists at the intersection of challenge and promise, balancing the fight to preserve public housing with the pressure of rapid redevelopment and changing neighborhood identity.

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Minhaj Sahil

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    Wyckoff Gardens Houses: Public Housing at the Center of Boerum Hill’s Gentrification
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