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Glenmore Manor Apartments HDFC

A Mix of Affordable Rental Housing for Low-Income Working Families
and Permanent Supportive Rental Housing for Special Needs Homeless
Families, Single Adults and Seniors

Glenmore Manor – Architect's rendering. View from Mother Gaston Blvd and Glenmore Avenue
Glenmore Manor – Architect’s rendering. View from Mother Gaston Blvd and Glenmore Avenue

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The Goal of Glenmore Manor Apartments

The goal of Glenmore Manor Apartments is to meet the immediate and long term housing needs of low-income working families and single adults from the underserved neighborhood of Brownsville/East New York, as well as the housing needs of special needs homeless families and single adult New Yorkers who seek affordable, permanent supportive housing with onsite daily supportive services. The target population will include formerly homeless Vets and survivors of domestic violence.

Glenmore Manor Apartments’ Mission Statement

  • To provide access to clean, safe, supportive housing in a totally drug-free environment for special-need, homeless tenants regardless of their race, socio-economic status, or sexual orientation.
  • To provide clean, safe, affordable rental housing to single working adults and families.
  • To ensure that each special-need tenant remains connected to treatment and obtains the best possible health outcomes, as needed.
  • To provide direct and indirect services in a supportive environment.
  • To empower our tenants physically, emotionally, socially, and spiritually.

Architect’s rendering of Glenmore Manor. View from playground
Architect’s rendering of Glenmore Manor. View from playground

Additionally, Glenmore Manor Apartments seeks to facilitate independence, dignity and well-being through a complement of safe, affordable housing and day-to-day services provided to the tenants of the supportive housing units. All tenants MUST be capable of independent living and may not require 24 hour round-the-clock, on-site medical intervention.

The building will have a 24/7 attended lobby, a state-of-the-art camera system, and exterior lighting that will enhance community safety. The building will have a multipurpose room available for community events and meetings. There will be many “Green” features including green roof, energy star appliances, water conserving fixtures, and other sustainable design elements.

Glenmore Manor. Architect's rendering. View of residential entry on Christopher Avenue
Glenmore Manor. Architect’s rendering. View of residential entry on Christopher Avenue

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Low-Income Working Single Adults & Families

Critical to the success of AAPCI’s housing management model is our commitment to inclusive, mixed-income communities. Rather than being marginalized in quasi-institutional settings, our formerly homeless tenants live alongside a diverse group of low-income professionals. In addition to making it possible for street homeless individuals to renew their lives; the affordability, security, and prime location of AAPCI’s housing enables our tenants for whom city life would not otherwise be financially feasible; to contribute to the unique character of the Big Apple. Some are young people newly embarking on an independent life, while others are winding down their careers or cutting down on expenses after retirement.

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HIV and AIDS

The high cost of health care and life-saving medications for people living with HIV/AIDS and homelessness often forces individuals with the illness to have to choose between their health and housing. In addition, persons living with HIV/AIDS are more likely to lose their jobs due to discrimination or as a result of frequent health-related absences. Up to half of all HIV positive individuals are thus at risk of becoming homeless.

Additionally, individuals who are already homeless are at increased risk of contracting HIV, such as intravenous drug users who share or reuse needles. Poor nutrition, exposure to the elements, and poor hygiene pose serious threats to a compromised immune system, making it more likely that HIV positive individuals will develop AIDS.

Special housing subsidies enable individuals living with HIV/AIDS to access permanent supportive housing and associated services. With the stability of a secure home, Glenmore manor Apartments’ tenants living with this illness are able to access essential medications, manage their condition with regular preventive care, and address psychological issues that may contribute to the course of their disease.

While AIDS remains a formidable foe and is the number one killer of people of color (84.5% of NYC’s new HIV cases are among African-Americans, Latinos and Asian/Pacific Islanders) in the United States, advances in drug therapies have turned AIDS into a chronic, manageable disease although one without a cure and one where an early death remains a real prospect. Today, people look forward to living longer rather than counting down the days to the end of their lives. This is what Glenmore Manor Apartments is all about — a place of hope, a place to live with dignity.

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Mental Health & Substance Abuse 

The movement in the 1970s to deinstitutionalize psychiatric patients had the unintended consequence of leaving scores of individuals with mental illnesses without access to appropriate care or supports. As a result, many became homeless.

Of the estimated 744,000 people who are homeless on any given night across the United States, nearly half of them have a serious mental illness, such as clinical depression, schizophrenia, bipolar disorders, personality disorders, and substance abuse.

Most of the mentally ill homeless go untreated and unable to work, and live a hand-to-mouth existence on the streets. They also frequently cycle in and out of medical and psychiatric hospitals, drug rehabilitation programs, prisons and jails, at enormous personal and public costs.

Glenmore Manor Apartments seeks to offer a life-enriching alternative to both institutionalization and life on the streets. Tenants will be offered the opportunity to manage their illness while living independently in housing, with the support of on-site Social Workers, Case Managers and linkages with community-based appropriate care.

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Vets & Seniors


AAPCI assists several special needs segments of the chronically homeless population in New York City, and regrettably, these include a significant number of military veterans. We serve veterans in all program areas, from transitional to permanent supportive housing. Click here to learn more about our senior housing programs and services.

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 Unit Breakdown

Architect’s rendering of Glenmore Manor. Southwest view. From Christopher Avenue
Architect’s rendering of Glenmore Manor. Southwest view. From Christopher Avenue

70 apartments will be set aside for formerly homeless persons or families.  59 apartments will be set aside for low-income seniors. 104 units will be family units – one-, two-, and three-bedroom apartments set aside for Community Board 16 (Ocean Hill/Brownsville) residents.

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Commercial & Retail Space

Architect’s rendering of Glenmore Manor with Commercial and Retail space
Architect’s rendering of Glenmore Manor with Commercial and Retail space
Architect's rendering. B'ville Hub - Innovation and Entrepreneurship
Architect’s rendering. B’ville Hub – Innovation and Entrepreneurship

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Community Space

Architect’s rendering of Glenmore Manor. Sectional perspective at B'Ville Hub
Architect’s rendering of Glenmore Manor. Sectional perspective at B’Ville Hub

Glenmore Manor HDFC Submenu

Hotline Phone Numbers

National Domestic Violence Hotline
1-800-799-SAFE (7233)
1-800-787-3224 (TTY)

National Teen Dating Abuse Helpline
1-866-331-9474
1-866-331-8453 (TTY)

In New York City ONLY
Domestic Violence Hotline: 1-800-621-HOPE (4673)
Crime Victims Hotline: 1-866-689-HELP (4357)
Rape & Sexual Assault Hotline: 1-212-227-3000
TDD phone number for all hotlines: 1-866-604-5350

AAPCI Donations

Volunteer Adult Literacy Tutor
Become a volunteer tutor in reading, writing, G.E.D. Prep, or English as a Second Language (ESL).

Call the Literacy Partners at 646-237-0120 or visit the Adult Literacy Tutor program, or Literacy Partners. Help change lives and make New York City one of the country’s most literate cities.

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