Rebuilding The Bronx
News12 New York
Where to Watch
Download the App
Local
Crime
Weather
Taking Action
beWell
The East End
Crime Files

Housing developer purchases All Hallows High School, city records show

Families and faculty at the school were notified in January that this was the final school year, unless they were able to raise $2.4 million by a certain date.

Heather Fordham

May 5, 2025, 5:18 PM

Updated

Share:

More Stories

Housing developer Azimuth Development Group has signed a contract to purchase All Hallows Catholic High School in Highbridge for $24 million, according to city records.

The news comes months after the 116-year-old Catholic high school announced it would be closing for good at the end of the 2024-2025 school year. At the time the announcement, the school president cited financial constraints, aging infrastructure and a decline in enrollment numbers.

City records recently made public show Azimuth through the entity of Bmad Walton LLC signed an agreement in March to purchase the property. According to its website, Azimuth is an affordable and market race housing development firm that has mixed-used properties in the Bronx, Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens.

Azimuth declined News 12's request for comment on what its plans are for the property.

Families and faculty at the school were notified in January that this was the final school year, unless they were able to raise $2.4 million by a certain date. They immediately launched a fundraising campaign to save the school but ultimately did not succeed.

"This year, we had 400 applicants, so our numbers were up all around. It had nothing to do with enrollment. I just think that the powers that saw an opportunity to make a sale, take the money and run, and the ministry, what we were founded on was forgotten about," said Orlando Brenes, director of admissions for All Hallows High School and a 1997 graduate.

Brenes says there have also been representatives from a charter school walking around the property and taking measurements as recently as Monday.

"There's a charter school has been walking around the building. So, we don't know if it's going to be turned into a charter school or was going to be turned into development. There's just it's not it's not really clear right now as to what's happened," said Brenes " Students are upset, seeing all these people walking around their building, taking measurements, talking about removing the seal, it's hurtful...I don't know if there is any hope at this point, we fought very hard."

The school is set to graduate their final class on June 7.

More Stories

Top Stories

App StoreGoogle Play Store

info

Newsletter

Send Photos/Videos

Contact

About Us

News Team

News 12 New York

follow us

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

more resources

Optimum Corporate

Optimum Service

Advertise on News 12

Careers

Content Removal Policy

© 2026 N12N, LLC

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Ad Choices