When we last visited 333 Carroll Street, the troubled building with the Robert Scarano-designed growth on top that helped get the Carroll Gardens downzoning movement rolling, the lights were burning late into the night. Yesterday, the Carroll Gardens Hell Building was hit with another Stop Work Order and a “ten-day letter of intent” to revoke its permits (which does not mean the permits will necessarily be revoked). Blogger Pardon Me for Asking said yesterday afternoon that there was still work going on even after the Stop Work Order had been issued. A new architectural firm is working on the building.
The Unhappy Life of 333 Carroll Continues
March 5th, 2008 · 2 Comments
When we last visited 333 Carroll Street, the troubled building with the Robert Scarano-designed growth on top that helped get the Carroll Gardens downzoning movement rolling, the lights were burning late into the night. Yesterday, the Carroll Gardens Hell Building was hit with another Stop Work Order and a “ten-day letter of intent” to revoke its permits (which does not mean the permits will necessarily be revoked). Blogger Pardon Me for Asking said yesterday afternoon that there was still work going on even after the Stop Work Order had been issued. A new architectural firm is working on the building.
Tags: Carroll Gardens · Construction Issues
2 responses so far ↓
1 Anonymous // Mar 5, 2008 at 6:19 am
Hopefully, the new firm will have blow torches to cut that thing down and concentrate on the actual brick shell. The neighborhood has had enough of this.
2 Anonymous // Mar 5, 2008 at 10:27 pm
this is as ugly as it gets
a true “monstrosity” and eyesore….what a sham it’s even up…it ruins blocks and blocks