No profit, no project: Reynoso tries to demystify development
A basic fact not well understood by the public and politicians is that developers must raise money for their projects — and cannot if the expected return doesn’t compensate for investors’ risk. In other words: No profit, no project. One elected official who gets it is Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso, a congressional candidate and unofficial member of the city’s YIMBY movement. I was impressed to see this sentence in his conditional recommendation of Monitor Point, a 1,150-unit project on the Greenpoint waterfront planned by the Picket family’s Gotham Organization: “Initial lending of capital is contingent on the developers demonstrating […]
This article originally appeared on The Real Deal. Click here to read the full story.
Categories
Recent Posts

Red Flags Hidden in Online Home Listings

AG James sues landlords over rent-stabilized building
violations

Listings Battle Webinar Recording

HPD unveils $1B fund for supportive housing
preservation

RGB member proposes “rent freeze for slumlords”

What We’re Buying During The 2026 Multifamily Crash

7 Signs You Found the Right House: How to Know When a Home
Is “The One”

How to Make a Home Senior-Friendly: 7 Practical Upgrades for
Long-Term Comfort

Brooklyn cracks $125M in one week of luxury
contracts

Sublandlord boots Kent Swig from Midtown office


