CITYCOREBUILDERSCityCore Builders · Queens, New York
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View all Areas →Ridgewood, Queens
Ridgewood's early-1900s row houses and attached multifamily buildings leave little room to grow outward, so most additions here work the rear yard, the roofline, or a tight bump-out. We design and build additions that respect the block's scale while opening up real square footage inside.
Local context
Ridgewood is built almost entirely of attached row houses and small multifamily buildings from the early 1900s, set on narrow lots with shared party walls. That layout shapes every addition decision here. You rarely have a side yard to expand into, so the practical moves are a rear extension into the back yard, a second-story or roof addition over the existing footprint, or a modest bump-out off the kitchen. Party walls also mean we coordinate closely with the structure you share with neighbors, both for support and for fire separation.
The zoning math matters more in Ridgewood than the available land. Most of the neighborhood sits in lower-density residential districts where FAR, required rear-yard setbacks, and lot coverage limits cap how much you can add before you trip into a variance or a special permit. A rear extension usually has to hold a minimum rear-yard depth, and a second story has to stay under the allowed floor area and height. We run those numbers against your block's zoning before any design work so you know up front whether a full extension, a partial bump-out, or an ADU is realistic for your lot.
Approvals are their own process. Work that changes the building envelope needs DOB filings, and on Ridgewood's landmark blocks any visible exterior change also needs LPC sign-off, which affects materials, window styles, and how an addition reads from the street. We handle the filing path, the structural drawings, and the inspections so the addition is permitted, legal, and built to hold a second floor's load on a hundred-year-old foundation.
Pushing the back wall into the yard for a larger kitchen or open living space, sized to the rear-yard setback your lot allows.
Adding a full or partial upper floor over the existing footprint, with foundation and framing checks to carry the new load.
Small cantilevered or footing-supported extensions that gain a few feet for a dining nook, bath, or stair without a full addition.
Accessory dwelling units in a rear or below-grade space where lot coverage and zoning permit a legal, separately usable unit.
Why local
A contractor who works Ridgewood knows how its row-house structures, party walls, and aging foundations behave before the first wall comes down. That means accurate load calculations for a second story, realistic rear-yard math against the zoning, and a feel for what LPC will accept on a landmark block. Local knowledge keeps the filings clean and the surprises few.
Ridgewood, Queens
Tell us about your row house or multifamily building and we will check the zoning, scope the addition, and lay out a clear path to a permitted build.