New York Daily News

East Village angel

Mystery buyer pays $32M to save Boys’ Club bldg.

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND Boys’ Club building will be preserved as a community center.

A mysterious benefactor has purchased the historic Boys’ Club building in the East Village for $32 million with the promise of preserving the space for community use, sources said Thursday.

The buyer, who bought the land as a foundation, wants to remain anonymous, according to the sources, one of whom said he had to sign a non-disclosure agreement as part of the deal.

“It’s going to be a community facility,” the source said. “It’ll be good for the neighborho­od. It’ll be good for the city.”

The Boys’ Club of New York announced it would be selling its 118-year-old East Village building on the corner of Avenue A and 10th St. last year, prompting speculatio­n the land would be used for luxury housing in the rapidly gentrifyin­g neighborho­od.

The building, known as the Harriman Clubhouse, stands catty-corner from Tompkins Square Park and has provided after-school programs to the neighborho­od since 1901. The Boys Club promised to stay in the East Village at another location, but said it was selling the building to bolster its programs in the South Bronx and East New York.

The purchase has been finalized, according to the source who signed the NDA.

Denham Wolf, the real estate firm that handled the deal for the buyer, said in a press statement that the foundation that purchased the seven-story, 50,000square-foot building “intends to ensure the ongoing nonprofit ownership of the property and to carry forward the building’s legacy of community-facing programs.”

A city Finance Department spokeswoma­n said the agency has not yet received a submission to record the deed as a public record, which would provide clues into the identity of the property’s new owner.

State Sen. Brad Hoylman (D-East Village), who fought to keep the Boys Club from leaving after the impending sale was announced, said he was heartened by the new developmen­t.

“It seems like an angel purchaser has stepped in,” he said. “While I wish that the Boys Club would remain in that building, this is the next big thing.”

“I’m thrilled that it is not a developer who is going to build luxury condominiu­ms,” he added.

 ??  ?? Gwen Carr, mother of Eric Garner, and Public Advocate Jumaane Williams (far right) lead protesters Thursday outside Gracie Mansion railing at the feds’ decison not to prosecute Officer Daniel Pantaleo in Garner’s 2014 death. At least five protesters were arrested after lying in a crosswalk (right) at East End Ave. and E. 88th St. around 6 p.m.
Gwen Carr, mother of Eric Garner, and Public Advocate Jumaane Williams (far right) lead protesters Thursday outside Gracie Mansion railing at the feds’ decison not to prosecute Officer Daniel Pantaleo in Garner’s 2014 death. At least five protesters were arrested after lying in a crosswalk (right) at East End Ave. and E. 88th St. around 6 p.m.
 ?? ROBERT SABO FOR NEW YORK DAILY NEWS ??
ROBERT SABO FOR NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

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