City forces affordable co-op to house squatter who looted it

by Erik Engquist

On the surface, 789 MacDonough Street is a glowing example of tenants becoming owners of their neglected building. The 41-unit, Bedford-Stuyvesant apartment house, built in 1930, began falling apart in the 1970s as the landlord essentially abandoned what was once a “beautiful, gorgeous building,” as longtime resident Lisa Lanier described it. The building was aging, its regulated rents were about $200 a month, and Bed-Stuy had become something of a war zone. “Do-or-die Bed-Stuy,” locals called it. “It was like living at the OK Corral. At any given moment, shots would ring out from the corners, and people would scream […]This article originally appeared on The Real Deal. Click here to read the full story.
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