Bryant Gardens

Contact Information

For more information about Bryant Gardens, contact WPCNA delegate Lou Bruno by email or by phone (866-839-5649), or visit the Bryant Gardens Forum (registration required).

Bryant Gardens Neighborhood Association

Bryant Gardens is uniquely situated a mile from downtown White Plains. Located on Bryant Avenue, it is nestled in among the fields and woods of the New York-Presbyterian Hospital campus on the north, the Ridgeway Country Club east, Burke Rehabilitation Hospital south, and the Bryant/  Mamaroneck Park on the west.
 
A Beauty
The winner of two White Plains beautification awards, it is a 409-unit co-operative housing complex comprising 15 garden-apartment buildings on 22 acres in a park-like setting. But it is also a self-contained neighborhood association!
 
Smoke-Free
Bryant Gardens is the first co-op in Westchester, and one of the first in New York state, to implement a smoke-free initiative to control and eventually eliminate second-hand smoke.  All new residents, and their guests, must agree not to smoke anywhere in the buildings.  Current residents are urged to use exhaust fans and smoking stations, and may not smoke in the halls or outdoors within 30 feet of a building.  In 2007 -- a record year for apartment sales -- over 40 new owners, representing just over 10% of the co-op, bought at Bryant Gardens under the smoke-free plan!
President
Gaierose Haskel
Secretary
Robert S. Orlofsky
Treasurer
Louis J. Bruno
Vice Presidents
Michael Flynn, Fred Noble, John Carlucci, Rose Hogan

 
The Bryant Gardens Board is elected at the annual meeting in December and meets at least once a month in executive session.
 
Secure
As a self-contained co-op and neighborhood association, Bryant Gardens maintains a Security Team second to none.  Composed of former White Plains P.D. personnel, now all licensed private investigators, it includes a City Marshall, Schools Investigator, former Investigator for the Westchester D.A., and P.D. Instructor.  Our Team patrols the buildings and parking areas, investigates the few incidents that occur each year, and mediates neighbor-to-neighbor disputes.