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    Search results for "Demolition"

    Landmarks Approves Demolition and New Construction in Greenpoint HD

    Landmarks Preservation Commission  •  Certificate of Appropriateness  •  Greenpoint, Brooklyn

    Rendering of the new building at171 Calyer Street, with a red line indicating the change in height from the previous proposal. Image Credit: NYC LPC

    Landmarks approved the demolition and new construction on the condition that applicants fine-tune design details with the Commission. On September 15, 2020, the Landmarks Preservation Commission approved a certificate of appropriateness for the demolition and construction of a new commercial building at 171 Calyer Street, in the Greenpoint Historic District of Brooklyn. (more…)

    Tags : certificate of appropriateness, Greenpoint Historic District
    Date: 10/26/2020
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    Designation Should Not Mean Demolition

    Commentary  •  Jeffrey Kroessler

    Jeffrey A. Kroessler

    The Landmarks Preservation Commission has calendared the AT&T Building at 550 Madison Avenue for a public hearing. As well it should. Designed by Philip Johnson and John Burgee, the skyscraper with a distinctive Chippendale top was the first post-modern addition to the skyline when completed in 1984. It is as emblematic of its time as the Woolworth Building (Cass Gilbert, 1913) and the Chrysler Building (William Van Allen, 1930). (more…)

    Date: 02/12/2018
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    Adjacent Building Owners Win Protections For Demolition

    Court Decisions  •  Demolition  •  Astoria, Queens

    32-49 37th Street, Queens. Image credit: GoogleMaps

    City sought to demolish derelict, mid-block row-house. The Department of Buildings issued an emergency declaration to demolish a deteriorating, vacant, and dangerous row-house at 32-49 37th Street between Broadway and 34th Avenue in Astoria. In order to demolish the abandoned mid-block building, contractors were required to erect scaffolding protecting the adjoining row-houses that physically abut the derelict building. The owners of the neighboring row-houses refused access to construct the scaffolding unless the City obtained legal permission to use their property and secured protection for their properties and its occupants through insurance and other forms of indemnification. (more…)

    Tags : 37th Street, Astoria, demolition, department of buildings
    Date: 10/06/2017
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    Warehouse Owner Wins Access to Neighbor’s Land for Demolition Fence

    Court Decisions  •  Building Demolition  •  Astoria, Queens

    2225 46th Street. Image credit: GoogleMaps

    Owner who was required to build a protective fence during demolition could not get adjoining property owners to give access to property needed to build the fence. North 7-8 Investors, LLC, the owner of a warehouse located at 2225 46th Street in Astoria, Queens, sought to demolish the warehouse and construct a new building. Under the City Administrative Code the warehouse owner must during demolition erect a perimeter fence to protect adjoining buildings. The fence in this instance would encroach into the back yards of eighteen adjoining properties. When the owner of the warehouse and the owners of the adjoining properties failed to reach an agreement on access to install the fence, the warehouse owner filed a petition in the Supreme Court for an order granting a license to enter the adjoining properties to perform the work. (more…)

    Tags : Queens County Supreme Court
    Date: 08/04/2017
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    Commission Addresses Demolition of Fire-Damaged Individually Landmarked Synagogue

    Landmarks Preservation Commission  •  Certificate of Appropriateness  •  Lower East Side, Manhattan

    Image credit: LPC

    Commissioners allowed demolition to proceed, but mandated that any material that can be retained or salvaged must be preserved. On July 12, 2017, Landmarks decided on application filed by the owners of the Beth Hamerdash Hagodol Synagogue, an individual City landmark, at 60 Norfolk Street on the Lower East Side.  The building was severely damaged by a fire in May of 2017, believed to have been set by a teenage arsonist who gained access to the building. The building’s roof collapsed in the fire, the interior was gutted, and that which was left standing sustained severe structural damage. The Synagogue sought a certificate of appropriateness to clear away rubble and take down the portions in danger of imminent collapse, then to remove what material remained, as those fragments would retain no architectural significance or integrity. (more…)

    Tags : Council Member Margaret Chin, Friends of the Lower East Side, Howard Zimmerman Architects, New York Landmarks Conservancy, Norfolk Street, Society for the Architecture of the City
    Date: 07/19/2017
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