BID will address sanitation and security problems and increase marketing for the area’s attractions. The Planning Commission unanimously approved a new BID in the East 161st Street corridor in the Bronx, which will encompass Yankee Stadium, Concourse Village, the Bronx County courthouses, as well as existing one-story fast-food restaurants and street-level retail. The BID is proposed to extend along East 161st Street, from River Avenue on the west to Morris Avenue on the east.
The BID proposal, which culminated nine years of community efforts, will focus on remediation of East 161st Street’s graffiti, litter and security problems. The first year’s budget is projected at $190,000, with almost half, $89,000, allocated towards six-day weekly sidewalk cleaning, garbage pick-up and graffiti removal. The budget will come from an assessment on commercial property owners of $32.97 for each linear front foot and $29 for each $1,000 of assessed valuation. Residential property owners will be assessed $1 a year. (more…)
Building, designed by Christian de Portzamparc, will include a redesigned subway entry. 400 Park Avenue South, LLC sought a special permit and text amendment to develop a 475-foot, 40-story residential building on the southwest corner of East 28th Street and Park Avenue South. The 417,544 sq.ft. building will have street-level retail space, and include the relocation and redesign of the 28th Street Lexington Avenue subway entrance.
The 19,279 sq.ft. L-shaped site is currently occupied by an at-grade public parking lot and an eightstory office building, which will be demolished. (more…)
New development potential of 26 million sq.ft. of office space and 13.6 million sq.ft. of residential; 24 acres of parks, a subway extension, and a new boulevard approved. On November 22, 2004, the Commission approved the Bloomberg Administration’s major urban planning initiative for Manhattan’s Hudson Yards, the area bounded by West 30th and West 43rd Streets, running from Seventh and Eighth Avenues to Twelfth Avenue.
The ten applications before the Commission would achieve a comprehensive redevelopment plan, the expansion of City services and a rezoning of the entire area. At the center of the plan for redevelopment is the transfer from the MTA to the Department of Citywide Administrative Services of the 30-acre, eastern portion of the Caemmerer Yard, spanning from West 30th to West 33rd Streets and from Tenth to Eleventh Avenues, for construction of a platform over the yard. (See C 040505 PQM.) The platform would facilitate future private development and the City’s construction of new parks. Further, the rail yard transfer would partially enable the No. 7 Flushing Line expansion, which is proposed to extend from Times Square to West 41st Street and Tenth Avenue, then south to West 34th Street and Eleventh Avenue. (See C 040504 PQM.) (more…)
West 43rd and West 47th Streets sites upzoned. On November 10, 2004, the full Council approved without modification the two applications of Verizon New York, Inc. to alter the zoning on a 143,300 sq.ft. full-block site on West 47th Street and a 45,200 sq.ft. site on West 43rd Street. Both sites are between 11th and 12th Avenues.
With the approval, the size of the building area permitted on the West 43rd Street site increased from 90,400 sq.ft. to 542,000 sq.ft. and residential units are now permitted asof- right. Verizon plans to sell this property and consolidate its uses on the West 47th Street site. The West 47th Street area can now increase its permitted development size from 286,600 sq.ft. to 716,500 sq.ft. (more…)
Development will contain 38 units of senior housing, office space, and 54 tenant parking spaces. The Department of Citywide Administrative Services obtained approval to dispose of a 47,108 sq.ft. site located at 240-02 North Conduit Avenue, currently providing 40 parking spaces for Rosedale LIRR commuters, to the New York City Economic Development Corporation for a new mixed-use development. EDC will transfer the site to Stone Ridge Homes, Inc., which will develop a three-story, 16,402 sq.ft. office building and a two-story, 38-unit senior housing home. DCAS stated that the lost LIRR parking spaces could be accommodated on an adjacent City parking lot, which is temporarily in use as a staging area for the Rosedale Station improvements.
At the November 30, 2004 City Council Subcommittee hearing, Council Member James Sanders Jr. stated that his concern over the senior housing facility’s proximity to JFK airport had been addressed by the developer’s commitment to soundproof the housing units and, consequently, he dropped his opposition. The full Council approved on December 7, 2004. (more…)