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129 items found for ""

  • YWCA OF BROOKLYN

    MULTIFAMILY YWCA OF BROOKLYN PREVIOUS PROJECT NEXT PROJECT ARCHITECT ​ PROJECT LOCATION 30 Third Avenue PROJECT SIZE 180,000 SF PROJECT COST ​ SCOPE HVAC design, energy efficiency, CHP feasibility The Young Women’s Christian Association was founded in 1888. The goal of the organization was to provide a meeting place for young women who were employed in retail stores, as office workers and other occupations throughout Brooklyn. These young ladies could listen to lectures, concerts, enjoy the reading room, and receive Christian instruction, if so desired. It was the first major organization of its kind in Brooklyn to be entirely run by women.

  • THE PARASOL PROJECT

    MULTIFAMILY THE PARASOL PROJECT PREVIOUS PROJECT NEXT PROJECT ARCHITECT Architecture In Formation PROJECT LOCATION 1921 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn PROJECT SIZE 174,000 GSF PROJECT COST $56 million SCOPE HVAC, sprinkler, plumbing and electrical power design and construction administration, Passive House, sustainability, façade optimization, energy modeling The building is being designed to achieve Passive House standard of performance. In addition to reducing electric and fuel demand, the building will also create its own supply by incorporating on-site microturbine co-generation plant along with solar panels. Along with energy savings, the design also calls for water conservation via ultra low fixtures, waste management, recycling and composting. ​ Morozov Engineering was invited to participate in a completion to win the right to develop a city-owned parcel of land in Brooklyn. The project, named The ParaSol, will consist of 150 residential units. 105 apartments will be available for residents earning up to 60% of median income and 45 units will be allocated for the formerly homeless. In addition to residential units, the building will also have a 6,000 SF communal facility, retail and parking spaces as well as roof garden on the roof.

  • Bc

    LANDMARKS 309 WEST 86TH STREET PREVIOUS PROJECT NEXT PROJECT ARCHITECT ​ PROJECT LOCATION 309 WEST 86TH STREET, NY PROJECT SIZE ​ PROJECT COST ​ SCOPE assisted with securing Landmarks Preservation Commission approval for installation of rooftop equipment Development in the Riverside-West End Historic District Extension I went through several phases in the years between the 1880s and 1930s. The earliest phase between roughly 1885 and 1900 saw the construction of speculatively built row houses and flats for the middle and upper classes. By the turn of the century, developers began to focus on constructing larger apartment buildings as increasing construction costs ended row house construction, and the newly opened IRT on Broadway made the Upper West Side more accessible to the city’s expanding population. Legislation such as the 1901 Tenement House Act, the 1916 zoning ordinance, and the 1929 Multiple Dwelling Law contributed to the transformation in the scale of the streetscapes of West End Avenue, Riverside Drive, and West 79th and West 86th Streets where row houses and smaller buildings were replaced by newer, larger buildings.[1] ​ 309-311 West 86th Street was commissioned as a hotel in 1912 by Weymer Hinckley Waitt- a railroad engineer turned hotelier, whose company later built the Weylin Hotel on Madison Avenue. The 12-story 40,000 square foot building was designed by Schwartz & Gross and completed in October of 1914 at a cost of $250,000. Originally known as Hotel Wayne until 1953 when it was converted into the Waldorf Nursing Home. In 1962 it became a residence club for senior citizens. Following interior alterations in 1979 the building was reconverted into apartments and became a co-op known as Stetson House. In 1984 John F Kennedy Jr. and Robert Littell moved in together into a 2-bedroom sublet at 309 West 86th Street. ​ 309 West 86th Street is one of several Morozov projects along the historic West End Avenue ( 347 West End and 915 West End ) ​ Morozov was retained to provide engineering design and consulting services for the owners of the penthouse apartment. The project involved a full floor gut renovation. [1]Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC), Riverside-West End Historic District Extension I Designation Report (LP-2463)

  • 915 WEST END AVENUE

    MULTIFAMILY 915 WEST END AVENUE PREVIOUS PROJECT NEXT PROJECT ARCHITECT ​ PROJECT LOCATION ​ PROJECT SIZE ​ PROJECT COST ​ SCOPE ​ 915 West End Avenue is a 120,000 SF 15-story multifamily building commissioned by a prolific upper west side builder Joseph Paterno (whose initials were inscribed above the entrance), designed by Rosario Candela and completed in 1922 at a cost of approximately $625,000. The building was designed in Renaissance Revival style, and is laid out as two wings around a central core with outer court. Boiler room, laundry facility, oil tank, and incoming services are located in the basement. Lobby and 94 apartments are located on floors 1 through 15. ​ In 2015 the building was included into Riverside-West End Historic District Extension II, and is subject to certain Landmarks restrictions. ​ Following the $ 85.5 million acquisition by a group of investors, Morozov was retained to evaluate the existing heating, plumbing, gas and power distribution systems. Our engineers worked closely with the owner’s architects and marketing team to identify and carry out short payback upgrades to support the investors’ conversion and repositioning program to the ‘best-in-class’ multifamily rental. ​ 915 West End Avenue is one of several Morozov projects along the historic West End Avenue ( 347 West End and 309 West 86th Street )

  • Privacy Policy | Evergreen

    Privacy Policy A LEGAL DISCLAIMER The explanations and information provided on this page are only general and high-level explanations and information on how to write your own document of a Privacy Policy. You should not rely on this article as legal advice or as recommendations regarding what you should actually do, because we cannot know in advance what are the specific privacy policies you wish to establish between your business and your customers and visitors. We recommend that you seek legal advice to help you understand and to assist you in the creation of your own Privacy Policy. PRIVACY POLICY - THE BASICS Having said that, a privacy policy is a statement that discloses some or all of the ways a website collects, uses, discloses, processes, and manages the data of its visitors and customers. It usually also includes a statement regarding the website’s commitment to protecting its visitors’ or customers’ privacy, and an explanation about the different mechanisms the website is implementing in order to protect privacy. Different jurisdictions have different legal obligations of what must be included in a Privacy Policy. You are responsible to make sure you are following the relevant legislation to your activities and location. WHAT TO INCLUDE IN THE PRIVACY POLICY Generally speaking, a Privacy Policy often addresses these types of issues: the types of information the website is collecting and the manner in which it collects the data; an explanation about why is the website collecting these types of information; what are the website’s practices on sharing the information with third parties; ways in which your visitors an customers can exercise their rights according to the relevant privacy legislation; the specific practices regarding minors’ data collection; and much much more. To learn more about this, check out our article “Creating a Privacy Policy ”.

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  • 230 EAST 18TH STREET, BROOKLYN

    MULTIFAMILY 230 EAST 18TH STREET, BROOKLYN PREVIOUS PROJECT NEXT PROJECT ARCHITECT Aufgang PROJECT LOCATION 230 East 18th Street, Brooklyn, NY PROJECT SIZE 24,500 SF PROJECT COST Withheld SCOPE HVAC, sprinkler, plumbing and electrical power design and construction administration A new 26-unit luxury rental building in Prospect Park South neighborhood of Brooklyn. The project contains a total of 13 studios, 10 one-bedrooms, and a pair of two-bedroom units. ​ The building does not use natural gas or any other fossil fuel for heating. The building is cooled and heated with a variable-refrigerant flow system in lieu of more conventional gas-fired boilers. Not relying on gas for heating approach is expected to save 150-200 metric tons of Carbon Dioxide emissions. In addition to efficient heating and cooling, the building’s fresh air is brought in via an energy-recovery ventilator (ERV). The ERV passively cools or heats the incoming fresh outdoor air by capturing energy of the indoor conditioned air.

  • WALTON AVENUE

    MULTIFAMILY WALTON AVENUE PREVIOUS PROJECT NEXT PROJECT ARCHITECT Aufgang Architects PROJECT LOCATION 1761 Walton Avenue. Bronx, NY PROJECT SIZE 110,000 SF PROJECT COST $ 28,000,000 SCOPE full MEP design, and construction administration services, energy modeling and sustainability consulting services, commissioning Mount Hope Walton Apartments A 14-storey affordable rental building in Mount Hope neighborhood of the Bronx developed by the Procida Companies, Southport Financial Services and Mount Hope Housing Company. The building will have 104 apartment units and a community facility complete with gym and basketball court. ​ The project is financed by the New York City Housing Development Corporation 24 million dollar tax exempt bonds and Low Income Housing Tax Credits. The project is further supported by $ 750,000 grant by the Bronx borough president. ​ Buildings’ mechanical systems include high efficiency condensing boilers designed to operate with low temperature water. Variable speed pumps, high output baseboard radiators, energy recovery ventilators and variable refrigerant flow systems. ​ The project is designed to meet the latest Enterprise Green Communities requirements for energy and water conservation, resident health and wellbeing and resiliency. The buildings are at least 15% more energy efficient than the current energy code. ​ Scope: full MEP design, and construction administration services, energy modeling and sustainability consulting services, commissioning

  • Ac

    LANDMARKS 79 WALKER STREET PREVIOUS PROJECT NEXT PROJECT ARCHITECT Stephen B Jacobs Group PROJECT LOCATION 79 Walker Street PROJECT SIZE 21,500 GSF PROJECT COST ​ SCOPE HVAC, sprinkler, plumbing and electrical power, fire alarm design and construction administration 79 Walker Street is a 6-story store and loft building constructed in 1869 for the rapidly expanding of the neighborhood’s textile trade. When completed, the building was occupied by manufacturing lofts, followed by a pocketbook manufacturer in the early 1900’s, hardware manufacturing and- most recently- an art gallery. ​ The developers retained Morozov to support their ambitious conversion to a modern office catering to New York city’s tech and startup firms. ​ Morozov provided MEP engineering design and approval services, working closely with architects and owners to upgrade building’s infrastructure and integrate state-of-the-art mechanical systems into the existing historic shell.

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