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CityViews: Done Right, Inwood Rezoning Could Be Good For Working Families

4 Comments

  • Inwood Resident
    Posted April 11, 2018 at 9:07 am

    Sure, but the devil is in the details as to what “done right” means. It’s not just slapping maxed out apartment buildings down and making up various affordability and job requirements. There has to be an element of planning as well.

    Seaman Ave and 204, for example, is a great example of an extremely uniform streetwall and quite high density — higher than what you would find on the side streets of the UWS or Greenwich Village. If copied and pasted onto the former industrial areas, a new neighborhood similar to Seaman Ave would be a great place to live and provide thousands of new apartments.

    But the city isn’t proposing that, they are proposing a doubling of density and tripling of size, which introduces all sorts of problems for affordability (due to all the market units), infrastructure (due to the massive population increase) and quality of life (from shadows to overtaxed and in some cases nonexistent community assets).

    The plan needs fixing to remove the aggressive politics and restore high-quality planning.

  • Lena Melendez
    Posted April 11, 2018 at 11:11 am

    To this man and his family, my heart reaches out to you. It is precisely because of families like yours that we should not vote for the EDC’s plan for affordable housing. Whenever the city plans on building 80% market rate apts in a neighborhood with working class poor folks ( under $62K/yr) what you get is a couple of crumbs in exchange for a major displacement of Latino families. My brother, read and educate yourself on what happened in other parts of the city the where rezoned. I promise you, you will change your tune. Peace

    • staten islander
      Posted April 13, 2018 at 10:44 am

      The truth is that in NYC land and labor are very expensive. I don’t see how you’ll get affordable units without market units to subsidize them. The money has to come from somewhere and it better not come from NYC taxpayers. And what happens if after a while it becomes too expensive to subsidize the affordable units causing the market rate tenants to flee. But I wonder if market rate tenants will want to live in a building with affordable apartments? Only time will tell………..

  • Toni
    Posted April 20, 2018 at 10:47 pm

    I am a live long Inwood resident and I have seen many changes thoroughout the years. I am against the rezoning, take a look at Williamsburgh, Brooklyn, you cannot even recognize that area any longer. Look at LIC, it looks like a concrete jungle. The rent there for a one bedroom is $3,500!!! I love my neighborhood and I do not want to see these high risers coming here. What about our infrastructure, it will not be able to handle 14,000 more people coming here. Yes, we do need affordable housing, but you know these promises are false. It will drive out the everyday person because you will not be able to live here anymore! Most of the buildings here are privately owned, the city will offer the landlords a tremedous amount of money and they will buy you out.

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