Plans for the mixed-use complex at 120 Fifth Avenue includes a "public piazza," which will reopen Butler Street to Fifth Avenue, but only to pedestrians. The connecting of Park Slope Village to Fifth Avenue will likely have major impacts on the modest neighborhood. Estimated completion of the project is 2024 On the other side of Butler Street, seeds of redevelopment were planted as far back as 2003, when Fourth Avenue was rezoned, allowing for much taller buildings. In 2009, the City Council voted to tear down the original 300-seat P.S. 133, designed by
C. B. J. Snyder, and replace it with a new 960-seat "state-of-the-art" elementary school. SBLM Architects designed the new school with elements that recall the
Flemish Renaissance style, to pay homage to the original structure. In 2016 a permit was filed for the demolition of a Park Slope Village townhouse on the corner of Butler Street and Fourth Avenue (344 Butler), with development plans for an upscale eight-story building with 11 residential units. Four years later, permits were filed for the demolition of three more townhouses in the adjacent lots, to be replaced by a twelve-story, 32-unit luxury apartment building. The two new additions to Park Slope Village are called
The Butler Collection. ==References==