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Sitting in the back pew of a packed church in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, William Jamieson hoped to learn winning tips from a workshop on how to play New York City’s housing lotteries.
The lotteries, which the city uses to distribute subsidized apartments in new buildings, can be hard to navigate, and Mr. Jamieson had applications pending for lotteries in two buildings.
But surrounded by hundreds of other hopefuls at the church, he was not feeling particularly lucky.
“I probably have a better chance playing the Lotto,” said Mr. Jamieson, 46, a warehouse worker who rents a room in a six-bedroom house and was hunting for a studio or a one-bedroom.
Last year, a new building in Greenpoint, Brooklyn drew 58,832 lottery applications for 105 affordable units. Not far behind was the Sugar Hill development in Upper Manhattan, which drew more than 48,000 applicants for 98 apartments.
And topping both was the drawing this month for 38 units at 59 Frost Street in Williamsburg. With rents ranging from $640 for a studio to $1,395 for a two-bedroom, the Brooklyn property attracted more than 80,000 applications, said Martin Dunn, whose Dunn Development Corporation built the project. That is one unit for every 2,110 applications.
“It really shows how desperate the need is for affordable housing,” Mr. Dunn said.
Sitting in the back pew of a packed church in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, William Jamieson hoped to learn winning tips from a workshop on how to play New York City’s housing lotteries.
The lotteries, which the city uses to distribute subsidized apartments in new buildings, can be hard to navigate, and Mr. Jamieson had applications pending for lotteries in two buildings.
But surrounded by hundreds of other hopefuls at the church, he was not feeling particularly lucky.
“I probably have a better chance playing the Lotto,” said Mr. Jamieson, 46, a warehouse worker who rents a room in a six-bedroom house and was hunting for a studio or a one-bedroom.
Last year, a new building in Greenpoint, Brooklyn drew 58,832 lottery applications for 105 affordable units. Not far behind was the Sugar Hill development in Upper Manhattan, which drew more than 48,000 applicants for 98 apartments.
And topping both was the drawing this month for 38 units at 59 Frost Street in Williamsburg. With rents ranging from $640 for a studio to $1,395 for a two-bedroom, the Brooklyn property attracted more than 80,000 applications, said Martin Dunn, whose Dunn Development Corporation built the project. That is one unit for every 2,110 applications.
“It really shows how desperate the need is for affordable housing,” Mr. Dunn said.