Greenpoint Nurses' Residence: Inside Brooklyn's Abandoned Quarters

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1940s Greenpoint Hospital Campus Tax Photo There is a certain kind of quiet that only abandoned buildings have. Not peaceful, quiet. More like held-breath quiet. The kind that makes you hyper-aware of every footstep, every creak, every shadow shifting at the edge of your vision. I found that quiet on a cloudy afternoon in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, standing outside a chain-link fence and looking up at the old Nurse Quarters of Greenpoint Hospital. I had stumbled onto the building almost by accident. I was deep into researching other vacant structures across the borough when the Nurses' Residence turned up on the blogs. The fact that it sat close to home made the decision easy. One overcast day, I drove slowly down the block on a hunch, scanning the fence line. That is when I spotted it: a gap, barely noticeable unless you were looking for it. No rope. No gear. Just an opening and a window of time between passing cars and foot traffic. I slipped inside. The entrance foyer stopped me cold...

Queens Parkway Hospital





The long-abandoned Queens Parkway Hospital in Forest Hills is finally set for demolition, marking the end of a saga that began over 15 years ago. Nestled in a bustling residential neighborhood off the busy Grand Central Parkway, near P.S. 196 elementary school, the hospital served the community for roughly four decades before shutting its doors in 2008.



The closure was part of a broader initiative led by the New York State Commission on Healthcare Facilities in the 21st Century, also known as the Berger Commission. The commission identified Parkway as one of several hospitals with an excess of unused beds, prompting the state’s Department of Health to mandate its closure. Despite a series of legal battles by the hospital’s owners to keep it open, the courts ultimately upheld the decision, sealing Parkway's fate.


The hospital's troubles were further marred by scandal. Robert Aquino, Parkway’s CEO, and former State Senator Carl Kruger were both imprisoned after investigators revealed that Kruger had accepted bribes from Aquino in exchange for political favors aimed at preventing the closure.








After the hospital shut down, there were numerous attempts to redevelop the property. Early plans included constructing market-rate housing, but these efforts stalled due to the complexities of navigating the Housing Commission process. The Department of Health had also suggested repurposing the site as a health clinic or diagnostic center, but those ideas never gained traction.



Now, after years of neglect and inaction, the new owners are finally moving forward with plans to demolish the crumbling structure. For the Forest Hills community, the move brings the hope of new opportunities and a fresh start for a site that has long been a symbol of bureaucratic gridlock and unfulfilled promises.



As demolition crews prepare to clear the property, the neighborhood awaits their new neighbors.











As of November 2024, the long-dormant grounds of Queens Parkway Hospital, a former clinical affiliate of Lenox Hill & Health Care Network, in Forest Hills are finally buzzing with activity. Heavy machinery lines the site, poised to transform the once-vacant hospital into a vibrant residential and community space. This redevelopment marks a significant milestone for a property that has languished for over a decade.  



The plans are ambitious: the existing six-story hospital building will be reimagined as an eight-story residential complex with integrated community facilities. The project will include a mix of parking options, featuring an enclosed garage with 19 spaces and an open parking area accommodating 86 vehicles.  












The hospital site changed hands in a $31.7 million deal between Jasper Venture Group and a consortium of buyers—Top Rock Holdings, SYUProperties, and RJ Capital Group. Jasper Venture Group had previously planned to develop the site into 135 affordable housing units, with a portion reserved for senior citizens. It also envisioned a new 14-story building with 216 market-rate apartments elsewhere on the property. However, earlier plans for condominiums fell through, leaving the property in limbo until its recent sale.  



This redevelopment reflects a growing trend in New York City: repurposing shuttered hospitals into residential spaces. According to a report by 6sqft, at least seven of the 18 hospitals closed in the city over the past 20 years have been converted into housing. If completed, Parkway would become the third former hospital in Queens to undergo such a transformation, joining the ranks of other adaptive reuse projects.  



For the Forest Hills community, the project offers the promise of renewal. What was once a symbol of disuse and delay is now poised to meet the city’s pressing demand for housing, all while blending modern living spaces with community-focused facilities. As construction ramps up, residents eagerly await the next chapter in Parkway’s story—a transformation from a shuttered hospital to a thriving residential hub.










March 9, 2025: Site Progress.


August 3, 2025: Asbestos Abatement.



🏥 More Abandoned NYC Institutions & Landmarks


Sources:




1.  Colangelo, A.  (2018, December 12). Queens’ Parkway Hospital, closed 10 years ago, slated for housing. amny.

2. Gustafson, A. (2008, November 11). New Parkway Hospital to close. QNS.

3. Mazzarella, M. (2018, October 3). Parkway Hospital Site Enters Public Review Process; See First Look at Residential Conversion. CityRealty

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