Saturday, October 11, 2025

North Cove Wraps Up Construction at 375 West 207th Street in Inwood, Manhattan


375 West 207th Street. Photo by Michael Young. 

Construction is wrapping up on North Cove, a 30-story residential building at 375 Wes 207th Street along the Harlem River waterfront in Inwood, Manhattan. Designed by Aufgang Architects and developed by Maddd Equities, the 295-foot-tall structure will span 544,000 square feet and yield 611 affordable rental apartments. The project will also include 60,000 square feet of lower-level retail space, residential amenities, and 120 parking spaces. The property is alternately addressed as 3875 Ninth Avenue and is bounded by West 207th Street, Ninth Avenue, and the Harlem River.

The last sections of metal scaffolding and sidewalk sheds were removed from the lower levels of the western corner since our last update in late May, when the final portions of the base were still temporarily covered. Plastic sidewalk barriers and metal fencing once visible across the first few floors have all been taken out.

Aerial view of development site at 3875 9th Avenue

Joy Construction Corporation and Maddd Equities are completing the project with the help of $288 million in financing secured in 2023. Wells Fargo’s Community Lending and Investment provided the financial package, which includes a $155 million letter of credit to back NYC-issued tax-exempt bonds arranged by CLI Debt. The remaining $133 million was provided by CLI Equity as an equity investment through the purchase of Low Income Housing Tax Credits and New York State Brownfield Redevelopment Tax Credits.

Residential amenities at North Cove will include bicycle storage, recreation rooms, shared laundry facilities, outdoor lounge and recreation spaces, and picnic areas. The property will also offer public access to an adjacent waterfront park on land provided by the city.

The nearest subway is the local 1 train at the elevated 207th Street station to the west.

KRVC - Boo! On Mosholu Returns October 25th!

 

Get ready for Boo on Mosholu!

We're so excited to announce that our annual Boo on Mosholu event is just around the corner! Mark your calendars for October 25th for a full day of Halloween fun! We're thrilled to be working with PS 81 to make this a spectacular community event.


Join us for an afternoon packed with gamescraftstricks, and, of course, lots of treats! It's going to be a fun, family-friendly event you won't want to miss. If you have a business on Mosholu Ave and would like to participate, please email us at the email below.


Start Here for the Full Experience!

To make sure you visit all of our participating local businesses and get your prize, all guests MUST start their journey at Hugo's Gourmet Market!


• Starting Point: Hugo's Gourmet Market

• Address: 6469 Broadway Bronx, NY 10471


Visit every location, and you'll receive a fantastic prize at the end!


A special thank you to our event coordinator, Angie Rivera, for decorating Mosholu Ave with her beautiful balloons and more! Did you know? Angie owns a local balloon business, Just 1 Pop Away! Follow her for all of your party needs!


After Boo on Mosholu, head on over to PS 81 for their fantastic Trunk or Treat! Keep the celebration going with even more spooky fun!


Thank You to Our Supporters!


A massive THANK YOU to the amazing businesses and sponsors who help make this event a reality every year! Your support is what brings the magic to Mosholu. We'll be announcing our full list of sponsors and supporters in the coming days, so stay tuned! A huge shout-out out to our PLATINUM sponsor, Ocean First Bank!


Vendor & Table Space Available!


Do you have a small business, craft, or community group you'd like to promote? We have a limited amount of table space available for vendors!


If you'd like to secure a spot to table this fantastic community event, please email laura4bronx@gmail.com as soon as possible to reserve your space.





Friday, October 10, 2025

MAYOR ADAMS CELEBRATES ONE-YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF PATH CO-RESPONSE PROGRAM CONNECTING NEW YORKERS IN NEED ON SUBWAYS TO SHELTER, HEALTH CARE, AND SUPPORT

 

Over 20,100 Contacts Made, More than 6,100 New Yorkers Received Care 

 

Part of Adams Administration’s Subway Safety PlanPATH Has Connected Nearly 1,900 New Yorkers Living in Subway System to Shelter 

 

Builds on Mayor Adams’ Historic Investments in Mental Health, Outreach, and Public Safety 

 

Continues Adams Administration’s “End the Culture of Anything Goes” Campaign, Highlighting Mayor Adams’ Efforts to Change Culture, Laws, and Investments That Improve Quality of Life and Prevent Public Disorder on City Streets 


New York City Mayor Eric Adams, New York City Police Department (NYPD) Commissioner Jessica S. Tisch, and New York City Department of Social Services (DSS) Commissioner Molly Wasow Park today celebrated the one-year anniversary of the Partnership Assistance for Transit Homelessness (PATH) program — a public safety and social services co-response outreach initiative, launched in August 2024, to help keep New Yorkers safe and healthy on the subway system. The PATH teams have made over 20,100 engagements with unhoused New Yorkers living in the subway system, delivering critical services  including shelter, meals, medical care, and mental health support  more than 6,100 times. Additionally, NYPD Transit Bureau officers, working alongside PATH clinicians, have removed more than 2,100 individuals from the transit system for various violations of the Metropolitan Transit Authority’s (MTA) rules of conduct or state law.  

 

Today’s announcement builds on Mayor Adams’ “End the Culture of Anything Goes campaign, the administration’s landmark effort to change the culture and laws that prevented people with severe mental illness from getting the help they needed. This initiative simultaneously makes the investments necessary to support outreach, harm reduction, wraparound services, and housing — to make lasting impacts on lives and communities, and improve New Yorkers’ quality of life. Mayor Adams is bringing the same energy and approach that proved to be successful in carving a new path for people with severe mental illness to address other health crises playing out on city streets, like drug addiction, and he recently laid out plans realize that vision by connecting those suffering with treatment.

 

Keeping New Yorkers safe is our number one commitment — especially on the subways, which millions of riders rely on every day,” said Mayor Adams. “Today, we are proud to celebrate the one-year anniversary of our PATH program, which has already connected thousands of New Yorkers in need on our subways to critical servicesWhen we took office, we made it clear: the days of ignoring people in need on our streets and in our subways were over. And since then, our administration has fundamentally changed the conversation on severe mental illness and fought to end the culture of ‘anything goes.’ Our PATH program shows that compassion, public safety, and justice must all go together — and this anniversary marks an important milestone in making New York City just that: more kindmore just, and safer for everyone.” 

 

PATH teams bring together NYPD Transit Bureau officers, New York City Department of Homeless Services (DHS) nurses, and outreach staff from NYC Health + Hospitals to connect New Yorkers to services, including shelter, meals, medical care, and mental health support. From 8:00 PM to 12:00 PM the next day, teams conduct targeted outreach across Manhattan stations and trains, engaging anyone who appears to be unsheltered.  

 

The program is part of the city’s growing use of co-response”  a crisis response model gaining traction nationally in which clinical professionals are paired with police to engage with members of the public in need of medical care and/or social services. Participating police officers receive specialized training in crisis de-escalation and allow their clinical partners to take the lead once safety is assured. While co-response is not meant to replace traditional outreach conducted without police involvement, in certain situations, the presence of police officers affords clinicians a greater sense of personal safety, enabling more meaningful engagement with those in need. Co-response also greatly enhances the ability of a clinician to initiate transport to a hospital for evaluation in circumstances where an individual exhibits symptoms of mental illness presenting a danger to themselves or others.  

 

Co-response offers tailored support based on each person’s needs  from a hot meal and a bed for the night to medical attention or psychiatric evaluation — improving both the safety and effectiveness of outreach efforts and increasing the changes of connecting people to lasting care. 

 

“Strengthening interagency collaboration through initiatives like PATH is vital to expanding the scope of the city's outreach efforts and increasing reliance on social workers to ensure meaningful engagements with New Yorkers experiencing homelessness,” said DSS Commissioner Wasow Park. “We are grateful for the dedication of our outreach workers and nurses who always lead with dignity and compassion as they engage New Yorkers who have fallen through every safety net, building trust and connecting them to life-saving supports. We are committed to leaving no stone unturned in our efforts to reach and support some of our most vulnerable neighbors and improve health care and housing outcomes for them.” 

 

“The PATH program is a critical initiative to address homelessness and other quality of life conditions in our subway system, and one year later, the results of this whole-government approach speak for themselves,” said NYPD Commissioner Tisch. “Thousands of New Yorkers are getting access to the resources they need and deserve, and transit crime is at record lows across the city. None of this is by accident  it’s because of the incredible work of the NYPD, DSS, DHS, and NYC Health + Hospitals that have all provided this important care, and Mayor Adams who has always put the safety of our city first.”   

 

“We’ve known all along that more effective mental health outreach and treatment were needed in our subway system to help cut down on transit crime and deal with disorder underground,” said MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber. “Thanks to investments from Governor Hochul and Mayor Adams, we’ve made progress on both fronts -- as proven out by surging ridership and customer satisfaction.” 

 

Addressing transit crime and homelessness in the subway system has been one of Mayor Adams’ top public safety priorities since taking officeIn February 2022, Mayor Adams first launched the Subway Safety Plan to address public safety concerns, protect riders, and connect some of the city's hardest-to-reach New Yorkers to services. Since the start of the plan, over 8,600 New Yorkers have been connected from the subways to shelter, with over 1,000 now in permanent, affordable housing. These outreach efforts, along with others, such as Subway Co-Response Outreach Teams (SCOUT), encounter a range of people living unsheltered with various needs.  

 

In the fall of 2022, Mayor Adams and New York Governor Kathy Hochul deployed anadditional 1,200 police officers to subway platforms and trains each day. Following the end of that deployment, in 2023, Mayor Adams again directed the NYPD to surge an additional 1,000 police officers into the subway system each day to help keep New Yorkers safe and bring overall crime in the transit system down. In January 2025, in partnership with the Adams administration and Governor Hochul, the NYPD began deployment of two police officers on every train during overnight hoursseven days per week. 

 

These safety efforts together are delivering indisputable results: overall transit crime fell 17 percent in September compared to the same month last year  the lowest level for any September in recorded history, excluding the 2020 and 2021 pandemic years. This follows record low major crime in transit for July and August, excluding the pandemic years. 

 

PATH complements the city’s 24/7 above-ground HOME-STAT outreach efforts — one of the most comprehensive outreach programs in the nation — which have also resulted in vital connections to shelter services for thousands of New Yorkers experiencing unsheltered homelessness across city streets, parks, and other public places. As of today, DSS has approximately 400 outreach staff canvassing the five boroughs around-the-clock; this includes a reliable network of contracted outreach workers from not-for-profit human services providers with extensive experience addressing unsheltered homelessness. 

 

Throughout his administration, and as laid out in “Care, Community, Action: A Mental Health Plan for NYC,” Mayor Adams has been committed to taking a public health approach to supporting people with severe mental illness, focusing on prevention and intervention.  

 

That Adams administration has opened 1,500 new low-barrier Safe Haven and stabilization beds for New Yorkers — bringing the total to 4,000 — and invested in innovative mental health programs like SCOUT, the opening of 13 new Clubhouses, and expanded Intensive Mobile Treatment teams.  

 

Additionally, earlier this year, in his State of the City address, Mayor Adams announced a historic $650 million plan to tackle homelessness and support people with severe mental illness by dramatically expanding the city's capacity to serve people experiencing unsheltered homelessness, as well as offering supportive, home-like environments to patients with serious mental illness who are ready for discharge from the hospital but do not yet have a place to go through “Bridge to Home,” a new innovative transitional housing model. 

 

Finally, the Adams administration also successfully advocated for changes to state law, passed in 2025that remove barriers to psychiatric care for those unable to recognize their own need for it, alongside increased transparency throughpublic reporting of involuntary hospital transport data. 

 

Building off all this work, in August, Mayor Adams announced a new change he is proposing in the 2026 state legislative session to support people struggling with substance use disorder and address public drug use on city streets that degrades quality of life and leaves a feeling of disorder among many city residents. The “Compassionate Interventions Act” will give clinical professionals the authority they need to bring someone who appears to pose a danger to themselves or others due to substance use disorder to a hospital and allow a judge to mandate treatment if the person is unwilling to enter treatment voluntarily. The change would help put New York in line with 37 other states that authorize involuntary commitment for substance use disorder as it builds on Mayor Adams’ successful work since the start of the Adams administration to address the interwoven crises of severe mental illness, addiction, and homelessness playing out on city streets. 

 

By combining targeted enforcement with compassionate, evidence-based outreach, the PATH program and broader Subway Safety Plan — along with these other public safety, public health, and housing plans — are delivering safer subways, stronger communities, and better futures for New Yorkers.