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    Search results for "Designation Hearing"

    Bunche House designated

    Landmarks Preservation Commission  •  Designation  •  Kew Gardens, Queens

    Home designated cultural landmark, but community demands full historic district. On May 17, 2005, Landmarks held a public hearing and immediately voted to designate the neo-tudor style, single-family home at 115-24 Grosvenor Road in Kew Gardens as a cultural landmark since it was the home, from 1952 until his death in 1971, of Dr. Ralph Bunche. Dr. Bunche was appointed to the committee that oversaw the partition of Israel following the United Nations’ formation and, in this position, successfully negotiated an armistice agreement ending Israeli-Arab fighting in 1949. Dr. Bunche was greeted with a tickertape parade down Broadway and awarded the 1950 Nobel Peace Prize. For his continued work with the U.N., President Kennedy awarded Dr. Bunche the Medal of Freedom, the United States’ highest civilian honor.

    Opponents of the single-site designation, including the Kew Gardens Civic Association president and chair, cautioned Landmarks that, if it “spot landmarked” Dr. Bunche’s home, the rest of Kew Gardens would remain at risk of being replaced with the oversized homes becoming prevalent in Queens. They argued that Dr. Bunche, who was on the board of the civic association, would have opposed making his home into a museum at the potential cost of losing Kew Garden’s other great homes. Urging Landmarks to forego a vote and act quickly to establish a Kew Gardens historic district, they argued that Dr. Bunche had chosen a neighborhood, not solely a house. (more…)

    Tags : 115-24 Grosvenor Road, Kew Gardens Civic Association, Ralph Bunche House
    Date: 06/15/2005
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    Bedell House designated over owner’s objection

    Landmarks Preservation Commission  •  Designation  •  Tottenville, Staten Island

    Landmarks designated nineteenth century home to prevent further destruction. On April 12, 2005, Landmarks held a public hearing and acted immediately to designate the James L. Bedell House, an 1874 single- family home located at 7484 Amboy Road in Tottenville and considered one of the best preserved Second Empire style houses on Staten Island’s South Shore. Landmarks scheduled a public hearing to consider the house for designation after the owner, John Grossi, Jr., spray painted the house bright orange and green. See 2 CityLand 44 (April 15, 2005).

    At the April 12, 2005 public hearing, Tottenville residents, including the director of the Tottenville’s Historical Society, testified in favor of designation and requested that Landmarks act to protect Tottenville’s legacy. Representatives from Congressman Vito Fosella’s and Council Member Anthony Lanza’s offices also supported designation. Grossi, the only speaker who opposed, admitted that it had been a mistake to spray paint the house. He testified that he never intended to live there, claiming the house was uninhabitable, and he purchased it only for investment purposes. Grossi planned to demolish the house and develop garden apartments and law offices. He added that he would not have purchased the house if he had prior notice that Landmarks was considering it for designation. (more…)

    Tags : 7484 Amboy Road, James L. Bedell House
    Date: 05/15/2005
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    Project Greenhope housing facility approved

    City Planning Commission  •  UDAAP/Disposition of City Land  •  East Harlem, Manhattan

    Facility to provide transitional housing for formerly incarcerated women. The Planning Commission approved a 49-unit, seven-story new building to serve as a substance abuse treatment facility and transitional housing for 70 homeless women ex-offenders, of whom an estimated 28 will have children residing with them. The new building, which will be funded by the New York State Homeless Housing Assistance Program, will be located at 435 East 119th Street in East Harlem and managed by Project Greenhope, a residential transitional treatment program for formerly incarcerated women. The application required the Commission’s approval of a UDAAP designation, disposition of City-owned property, and a special permit to increase the permitted floor area.

    The site, located on a primarily residential block, comprises two City-owned lots on the north side of East 119th Street between Pleasant and First Avenues which currently contain a community garden that will be relocated. Project Greenhope manages an existing facility on East 119th Street and plans to move all 62 of its residents into the new building. Residents of the new building would either be in transition from incarceration to independent living or referred as an alternative to incarceration. The proposed 36,225 square-foot building will include an on-site nursery and day care center, a community garden and a yard for recreational activities. (more…)

    Tags : 435 East 119th Street, Project Greenhope
    Date: 04/15/2005
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    Historic District approved

    Landmarks Preservation Commission  •  Designation  •  Douglaston Hill, Queens

    Landmarks designates northeastern Queens suburb a historic district. On December 14, 2004, Landmarks designated the Douglaston Hill Historic District in Queens, a residential park-like community developed between 1890 and 1930, to preserve the special historical and aesthetic values of early twentieth-century architectural styles within the area. The new district consists of 31 freestanding, wooden, single-family homes of Queen Anne, Colonial and Tudor Revival style. Douglaston Hill became one of the first commuter suburbs that marked Queens’ transformation away from small farms and colonial villages. It was also the home of many prominent New Yorkers, including the O’Leary, Stuart and Hamilton families.

    At the August 3, 2004 public hearing, Council Member Tony Avella and other public officials spoke in favor of designating the district to preserve styles which are becoming increasingly rare due to over-development or inappropriate alterations throughout Queens. Landmarks noted that the newly created historic district protects the turn-of-century picturesque architectural styles of the rapidly disappearing era of suburban development. (more…)

    Tags : Douglaston Hill Historic District
    Date: 02/15/2005
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    Rezoning approved for two Verizon sites

    City Planning Commission  •  Rezoning  •  Clinton, Manhattan

    Commission approved Verizon’s consolidation plans. Verizon New York, Inc. sought to rezone two sites that it occupies in Clinton, Manhattan. The first proposal would rezone a 45,200 sq.ft. site at the intersection of Eleventh Avenue and West 43rd Street from M2-3 to C6-4. The second would rezone a 143,300 sq.ft. full-block area, bounded by Eleventh Avenue, West 47th Street, Twelfth Avenue and West 48th Street, from M2-3 to Ml- 5. The Commission unanimously approved both. Verizon intends to sell the up-zoned West 43rd site and consolidate operations into a new building located within the West 47th Street rezoning.

    The rezoning on the two West 43rd lots would allow commercial/ residential uses and increase the sites’ permitted building size from 90,400 sq.ft. to 452,000- 542,400 sq.ft. Verizon argued that the one-story warehouse and six-story office on the site were antiquated, out-of-character and required upgrading. (more…)

    Tags : Manhattan Community Board 4, Verizon New York
    Date: 11/15/2004
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