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Bergen United Way weighing bid on Red Cross building in Ridgewood for affordable-housing project

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AUGUST 21, 2015, 6:25 PM    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 2015, 7:59 PM
BY CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

RIDGEWOOD — Bergen County’s United Way is considering acquisition of the American Red Cross building on Godwin Avenue, having deemed the two-storied structure ideal for a possible affordable-housing project.

Tom Toronto, the president of Bergen County’s United Way, confirmed Friday his organization “is interested” in procuring the Red Cross site in Ridgewood, which recently hit the market following a reorganization of the non-profit’s real estate holdings.

Toronto said village officials approached him a few weeks ago to suggest the building as a potential location for a United Way-funded supportive housing project.

“Our interest would be to convert that building into housing, and there is some appeal to the structure: It lends itself to adaptation for housing relatively easily and efficiently,” Toronto said, mentioning that it’s asking price could be “a hurdle.”

Toronto said Bergen County’s United Way could end up making an offer on the Ridgewood parcel as soon as next week, but as of now “We’re in the process of assessing whether we can make a meaningful offer for the building,” Toronto said.

The Red Cross building needs an elevator, Toronto said, noting the building’s first floor would likely be devoted to living spaces for the physically and developmentally disabled. Other units in the building, Toronto said, could be allocated as senior-citizen residences, depending on the village’s affordable housing needs.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/bergen-united-way-weighing-bid-on-red-cross-building-in-ridgewood-for-affordable-housing-project-1.1396607

4 thoughts on “Bergen United Way weighing bid on Red Cross building in Ridgewood for affordable-housing project

  1. I fully support using this structure for affordable housing. But it points out the problems with the spot zoning created by the planning board’s decision to open up downtown ridgewood to developers.. More and more property owners are going to seek to build apartments in downtown Ridgewood. If i owned a one story structure for which I got one rent from one tennant, i would be a fool not to want to build a four story structure and bring in 50 tenants like the developers have now been given the green light to do. This is the floodgate that the planning board foolishly or intentionally opened. While Gail Price said it wasn’t spot zoning, she was wrong on that issue as she has been on so many of her irrational decisions pro-deveelopment, pro-hospital rulings over the past four or five years.

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  2. Meeting affordable housing for COAH, allocating for physically and developmentally handicapped and hopefully the rest for seniors. Sounds like a good deal for Ridgewood.

  3. Enough with COHA and all the rest of that bull. West Bergen Mental Health and all their share house located in town. Low income housing on Broad St where the playground use to be. Woodlea Home on Prospect St, Senior housing on Ridge Rd. How much do you need? That statement from the Mayor was just to play to his base. United Way said nothing about special needs.

  4. to 12:48 pm-
    (1) did we read the same article regarding special needs? The article states “The Red Cross building needs an elevator, Toronto said, noting the building’s first floor would likely be devoted to living spaces for the physically and developmentally disabled. Other units in the building, Toronto said, could be allocated as senior-citizen residences, depending on the village’s affordable housing needs.
    (2) COAH isn’t about how much you or I want. It is driven by state government and the courts. Those new developments downtown are reserving 20% for COAH, if you read the details.

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