New renderings have been revealed for 218 23rd Street, a four-story residential building in Greenwood Heights, Brooklyn. Designed by Input NYC and developed by Kings Capital, the structure will yield four condominium units in two- to three-bedroom layouts, each with private outdoor space and storage room. The project is located between 4th and 5th Avenues.
The renderings depict the front elevation, which features a straightforward massing leading to a landscaped roof deck and a bulkhead set back from street level. The façade will be composed of light gray brick with various ornamental bond patterns surrounding a grid of floor-to-ceiling windows. A stack of balconies on the western half of the building will feature curved metal railings, complementing the building’s use of rounded brick corners. An elevated planter bed will sit beside the main entrance at the ground floor.
The following renderings preview the Porcelanosa-designed interiors, including the entrance hallway, a kitchen and dining room layout, and bathrooms.
The property was formerly occupied by a two-story residential building, as seen in the below Google Street View image from before its demolition.
The Jennifer Lee Team at SERHANT is handling sales and marketing for the units. The nearest subway from the development is the R train at the 25th Street station to the west along 4th Avenue.
218 23rd Street is expected to be completed in spring 2026.
Subscribe to YIMBY’s daily e-mail
![]()
Follow YIMBYgram for real-time photo updates
Like YIMBY on Facebook
Follow YIMBY’s Twitter for the latest in YIMBYnews













The facade is rather attractive with its various patterns. The entrance hall reminds me too much of a bathroom, especially with those light fixtures. I presume this is a walkup. Entering the bathtub would be rather difficult with that shelf thing blocking the way.
Ugliness to the max those balconies looking so cheap. In fact the whole building is out of place.
I notice Greenwood heights definitely have not build any truly affordable housing at all these neighborhoods should not be exempt
Please stop with these stupid balconies.
Beautiful building. Great developer.