I Live Here Westchester NY

The Westchester Brief | 04.27.26: Port Chester's 957-Unit Groundbreaking

I Live Here Media Season 1 Episode 86

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Governor Kathy Hochul stood in Port Chester last week and announced the official groundbreaking of Westchester Crossing—957 housing units on the site of the former United Hospital, empty since 2004. The $65 million infrastructure investment, including up to $10 million from the Mid-Hudson Momentum Fund, is the biggest move the Port Chester/Rye border has seen in a generation.

We break down the unit mix, the affordable share, the Rye resident concerns that haven't gone away, and what to watch for as vertical construction starts.

Plus: District Galleria site plan approval tracking, the Board of Legislators skilled trades measure, Scarsdale's Envirothon win, and Element 46's Spring 2026 cohort with Demo Day June 11.

**0:00** Cold open
**0:20** Westchester Crossing groundbreaking
**3:30** Why this matters and the Rye question
**4:30** What to watch next
**5:00** Quick hits across Westchester
**6:15** Close + newsletter CTA

**Sources:** NY HCR (Westchester Crossing); News 12 Westchester; Westfair Communications; MyRye.com

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SPEAKER_00

957 housing units, $65 million in infrastructure, one governor with a shovel, and one old hospital campus that has been empty for 22 years. Until this week. This is the Westchester brief on Jim. Let's get into it. On Wednesday, Governor Kathy Hoachel stood in Port Chester and announced the official groundbreaking of Westchester Crossing on the former United Hospital site. The numbers are not small. 957 housing units at full build, 105 of them designated affordable, $65 million in infrastructure investment to prepare the site, including up to $10 million from the mid-Hudson Momentum Fund. Construction is expected to be completed in 2027 with vertical development proceeding in phases. Here is the unit breakdown. 358 studios, 456 one bedrooms, 143 two bedrooms. The affordable share comes in at roughly 11%. The old United Hospital closed in 2004. For the last 22 years, that 15-acre parcel at the Port Chester and Rye border has been one of the Hudson Valley's most visible orphan medical campuses. Multiple redevelopment proposals cycle through and never reached ground. This week, that changed. Why this matters? For the place you live. This is the largest single groundbreaking Port Chester has seen in a generation. On top of the roughly 20,000 housing units already in motion across Yonkers, New Rochelle, and White Plains, the county just added another batch of density. And a governor level announcement that tells you Albany wants to be seen putting money behind suburban housing supply. Now, the context. The Rye objection has not gone away. Rye residents have pointed at traffic spillover, school enrollment pressure, and density mismatch to what they believe the area can absorb. The Westchester Crossing groundbreaking does not settle those concerns, it just moves them from the hearing room to the construction fence. And here is what to watch for next. The first vertical construction permits filed with the village of Port Chester. Any formal objections from Rye to the County Planning Department, updated traffic studies, and what Metro North says about the Port Chester station is 957 units start to drive ridership through it. Completion in 2027 assumes the phase construction holds on schedule, and in this cycle of material costs and labor pressure, that assumption is not automatic. Here is what else is happening across Westchester this week. The White Plains Planning Board is tracking toward a site plan approval window for the district galleria redevelopment. That is, the $2.5 billion project on the 11-acre former Galleria Mall site. The Common Council approved the zoning in December. Site plan approval was the developer's stated target for this month. We will know soon if that target holds. On April 20th, the Westchester County Board of Legislators unanimously passed a measure expanding access to quality training in the skilled trades. That is a direct supply side response to the construction labor demand the housing pipeline is about to create. Scarsdale High School's 4A team won the 2026 Westchester County Regional Environment at Croton Point Park and will represent the county at the state competition. In element 46, the Westchester County Tech Accelerator, powered by QUAY Acceleration, has announced eight startups selected for its spring twenty twenty-six cohort across enterprise artificial intelligence, education technology, financial technology, and the creator economy. Demo day is scheduled for June 11th. Subscribe to the newsletter at IlliveHearWestchester.com for the week's most important Westchester stories in writing. I'm Jim, and I live here. I'll see you tomorrow.

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