Open House Party for 20 Henry Street, Brooklyn Heights 20 Henry Street Sales Office Dismantled 20 Henry Street Roof May Finally Get Fixed - Brooklyn UPDATE:The Eagle has confirmed these reports and provides further details. New Financing Reported For Stalled Candy Factory Brooklyn Eagle Sales were halted, the sales office was dismantled, and a hole you could drive a Prius through developed in the roof right before one of the rainiest seasons on record. AIG, which put millions into the deal, sued the developers (Shelly Listokin, Stan Listokin and David Tropper of Urban Realty Partners). In December 2007 permit applications were filed with DOB by Urban Realty Partners for the conversion. The garden was dug up but the economy crashed and by April 2009, work stopped. It took years (and eight tries) before the Landmarks Preservation Commission approved building a four-story annex in the garden, which once was a major amenity. The artists who once populated the former Mitchell-Lama were forced out in a big ugly controversy in 2003. ![]() And the new owners might need a little magic - there's been an incredible string of mishaps at that building. Magic Johnson is the Johnson in Canyon-Johnson. According to the Brooklyn Eagle, several real estate blogs report that David Schechtman of Eastern Consolidated, a real estate investment services firm, “just closed on Brooklyn’s 20 Henry Street.” (20 Henry is the former seven-story Peaks Mason Mints building, or "Candy Factory.")Īt a quarterly luncheon of the Real Estate Board of New York (REBNY), Schechtman reportedly told REBNY members that "Canyon-Johnson Urban Funds inked a $15M deal” with them.
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