Pricing ranges from
    $6,434 – 8,364/month

    St. Nicholas Home

    437 Ovington Avenue, Brooklyn, NY, 11209
    4.0 · 22 reviews
    • Independent living
    • Assisted living
    AnonymousLoved one of resident
    4.0

    Caring staff, dated building, recommended

    I've seen firsthand that the staff are kind, compassionate and truly treat residents like family - the place feels home-like, peaceful and safe. Meals, daily activities, beautiful gardens and a chapel help residents stay engaged, and rooms are kept acceptable with laundry/cleaning services (though pickup can be irregular). My biggest concerns are a brusque/at times dismissive administration, shared rooms, staffing gaps for showers, and a dated building (carpet, paint, entryway) with occasional odors. Overall I recommend it for the devoted, attentive staff and resident-centered care, but expect needed renovations and some administrative issues.

    Pricing

    $6,434+/moSemi-privateAssisted Living
    $7,720+/mo1 BedroomAssisted Living
    $8,364+/moStudioAssisted Living

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    Amenities

    Healthcare services

    • Activities of daily living assistance
    • Assistance with bathing
    • Assistance with dressing
    • Assistance with transfers
    • Medication management
    • Mental wellness program

    Healthcare staffing

    • 12-16 hour nursing
    • 24-hour call system
    • 24-hour supervision

    Meals and dining

    • Diabetes diet
    • Meal preparation and service
    • Restaurant-style dining
    • Special dietary restrictions

    Room

    • Air-conditioning
    • Cable
    • Fully furnished
    • Housekeeping and linen services
    • Kitchenettes
    • Private bathrooms
    • Telephone
    • Wifi

    Transportation

    • Community operated transportation
    • Transportation arrangement
    • Transportation arrangement (non-medical)

    Common areas

    • Beauty salon
    • Computer center
    • Dining room
    • Fitness room
    • Gaming room
    • Garden
    • Outdoor space
    • Small library
    • Wellness center

    Community services

    • Concierge services
    • Fitness programs
    • Move-in coordination

    Activities

    • Community-sponsored activities
    • Planned day trips
    • Resident-run activities
    • Scheduled daily activities

    4.00 · 22 reviews

    Overall rating

    1. 5
    2. 4
    3. 3
    4. 2
    5. 1
    • Care

      3.6
    • Staff

      4.3
    • Meals

      3.3
    • Amenities

      3.4
    • Value

      4.0

    Pros

    • Caring, compassionate and attentive staff
    • Staff teamwork described as family-like
    • Responsive and helpful caregivers
    • Safe and organized environment
    • Clean and neat rooms and facilities (reported by multiple reviewers)
    • Daily room and bed cleaning and laundry service (reported)
    • Three meals a day and regular snacks
    • Occasional homemade dishes (fresh quiche) reported
    • Regular activities (bingo, dancing) and daily programming
    • Monthly parties with DJ and holiday events for residents and families
    • Beautiful gardens, courtyard and a chapel on site
    • Home-like, down-to-earth atmosphere
    • Non-profit ownership and perceived strong commitment to residents
    • Case management described as professional and caring
    • Vibrant neighborhood and supportive community
    • Upcoming renovations planned (reported positively)
    • Flexibility for residents to leave with family

    Cons

    • Inconsistent administration: long waits and unpleasant or demeaning demeanor from some administrators
    • Reports of urine and other bad smells in the facility
    • Signs of resident neglect in some cases (dirty clothes, uncombed hair)
    • Insufficient assistance with personal care for some residents (e.g., showers)
    • Staff sometimes ignoring residents during activities
    • Some residents found sleeping late in the morning (potential understaffing or engagement issue)
    • Mixed cleanliness reports: entryway, carpets and paint need attention in areas
    • Facility described as old, dated, worn, drab and in need of renovation
    • Perception of not reinvesting enough money into the building
    • Shared rooms and limited availability of private rooms
    • Infrequent laundry pickup reported by some families
    • Mixed food quality: some say horrible food while others praise meals
    • Allegations of poor treatment by administrative staff and at least one negative referral (Place for Mom)
    • Reports of religious/cultural environment being not welcoming to some (Jewish/Christian-centric concerns)
    • Some staff empathy issues reported (lack of empathy in certain interactions)
    • Resident conflicts and occasional arguments

    Summary review

    Overall sentiment in the reviews is mixed but leans positive with strong, repeated praise for frontline staff and the community atmosphere. The most consistently cited strength is the caregiving team: many reviewers describe staff as caring, compassionate, attentive and ‘‘like family.’’ Multiple comments note responsive, cheerful staff who make residents feel comfortable and respected, and case management is called professional and caring. The facility is often described as home-like, down-to-earth and human-centered, with a sense of community, strong resident relationships, and a peaceful environment. Several reviews emphasize safety, organization, and a genuine commitment to residents, and many families explicitly highly recommend the home.

    Social life and programming are frequent positives. Reviewers report regular, meaningful activities such as bingo, dancing, daily programming, monthly parties with a DJ, and holiday events (including Christmas parties) that include residents and families. Musical offerings, cake and festive gatherings are specifically noted as enjoyable for residents. The grounds and communal spaces also receive praise: beautiful gardens, a pleasant courtyard and a chapel are repeatedly mentioned as assets that contribute to the home-like feeling.

    Dining and housekeeping receive mixed marks. Multiple reviewers confirm three meals a day, daily room and bed cleaning, laundry service, and some homemade dishes (fresh quiche). Others, however, complain about poor or “horrible” food. Related services such as laundry pickup and assistance with showers are inconsistent in reports: while some families praise laundry service and cleanliness, others report infrequent laundry pickup or insufficient help with bathing. Cleanliness is a mixed theme—several reviewers call the facility neat and ordered, but others report bad odors (including urine smell), dirty resident rooms, and the need for carpet cleaning and paint updates in certain areas.

    Facility condition and reinvestment produce a clear split among reviewers. Many appreciate the home-like feel, chapel and gardens, while a substantial number describe the building as old, dated, worn, drab, or dingy and call for renovations. Some positive comments reference upcoming renovations, but multiple reviewers feel the facility is not sufficiently reinvesting in physical updates. The entryway, carpets and paint are specific trouble spots named by families.

    Management and administration are a notable area of variance and concern. Several reviews praise administration as wonderful, professional and caring, but others relate negative experiences: long waits to reach administrators, unpleasant or demeaning remarks from administrative staff, and at least one negative referral from Place for Mom. This inconsistency in leadership and family experience is an important pattern—while frontline staff receive strong praise, interactions with administrative personnel appear to be uneven and have caused significant dissatisfaction for several reviewers.

    There are also some serious red flags raised by a minority of reviewers that merit attention. Reports of resident neglect—dirty clothes, uncombed hair, and residents found sleeping mid-morning—coupled with accounts of staff sometimes ignoring residents during activities, suggest occasional lapses in personal care or engagement. Complaints about odors coming from resident rooms and insufficient assistance for showers point to possible understaffing or inconsistent care practices in some shifts. Additionally, at least one reviewer described the environment as religiously oriented in a way that felt exclusionary (Jewish/Christian-centric), which may concern families seeking an inclusive environment. Shared rooms and a lack of private rooms, plus limited openings at times, are practical constraints for some families.

    In sum, the reviews portray St. Nicholas Home as a largely compassionate, community-oriented non-profit with many strengths in caregiving, programming and atmosphere. However, the facility shows clear areas for improvement: building maintenance and aesthetics, consistency in housekeeping and odor control, standardization of personal-care assistance, and more consistent, respectful administrative communication. The overall pattern is one of strong frontline staff creating a positive resident experience despite uneven facility conditions and administrative issues; prospective families should weigh the strong testimonials about staff and community against reports of maintenance needs, occasional neglect, and mixed administrative interactions when making a placement decision.

    Location

    Map showing location of St. Nicholas Home

    About St. Nicholas Home

    St. Nicholas Home, now closed, offered assisted living and respite care in the Bay Ridge neighborhood of Brooklyn, with its address at 425 Ovington Avenue and the nurses' home across the street at 443 Ovington Avenue, in a big redbrick building with Victorian-style details that looked like something out of old Brooklyn, which made it feel cozy and familiar to many seniors who lived there, and there was a nice garden outside where you'd often see residents enjoying fresh air in a safe courtyard. The facility had room for up to 75 people in a close-knit, community-oriented setting where folks could choose between one-bedroom, semi-private, studio, and private bath options, all with the comforts needed for those aged 55 and older, including full furnishing, housekeeping, daily room cleaning, linen and towel service, and some rooms even had kitchenettes, so folks could feel at home.

    Residents got all-inclusive rent that covered nearly everything, which made paying easy to manage, and they could stay as their needs changed, since St. Nicholas Home offered a range of care from independent living to assisted living and memory care, plus short-term respite care if a caregiver needed a little break, with 24/7 staff on-site to help with medication, bathing, dressing, or transfers, and a nurse around up to 16 hours a day. Meals were served in a shared dining room, prepared fresh, and they could handle special diets like diabetic, vegetarian, kosher, low salt, or low fat, and snacks were always available, and loved ones could join for meals if they wanted. Amenities included a fitness room, movie room, small library, a computer center, a beauty salon, lounges, a chapel, and activity rooms, and there were sitting areas on each floor, a television room, and an outdoor garden for walking paths and fresh air.

    The social and recreational programming was steady, with things like bingo, bridge, arts and crafts, movie nights, community-sponsored activities, planned day trips, and birthday or holiday parties, so there was always something going on, and the staff supported resident-led events and family involvement. The Home offered transportation for doctor visits and outings, concierge support, and an on-site pharmacy, along with mental wellness programs, wellness checks, and language assistance in English, Farsi, French, Italian, and Spanish. Residents-who could even have pets-felt supported with help for activities of daily living and could access health care as needed including medication management. Security was good, with 24-hour call systems, supervision, emergency alert systems, and regular staff checks.

    St. Nicholas Home had a long history, dating back to 1912 as Bay Ridge Hospital before it became a nursing home and assisted living facility, and after a fire, they built a fireproof five-story building for safety. At its largest, it had 96 beds and served as a nonprofit, helping seniors age in place. Facilities included an on-site laundry, daily linen service, a chapel, a wellness center, and community spaces for socializing. The property had a total size of 54,512 square feet, sitting on 21,505 square feet of land, with frontage and a depth that gave enough space for both buildings and gardens, and while it was once a busy home for elders, it ended up closing and is set to become a new high school, after the city bought it for $10.2 million. The building is no longer open, but many remember its focus on belonging, comfort, and care in a place that once felt like home.

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