The RFP for the Greenpoint Hospital redevelopment project has been out for close to three years now – that HPD hasn’t awarded it to anyone yet is a crime. Remember, this site is one of the (many) publicly-owned sites that was supposed to supplement the developer-provided affordable housing on the waterfront. Cook Street aside, has any new affordable housing been constructed on City-owned sites since May, 2007?
Community Group Pushing for Greenpoint Hospital
Greenpoint Owner Charged with Dumping Sewage
Ick.
[via Laura]
Charter School Inks Deal at 33 Nassau Avenue
Believe High School Networks, an organization that operates various charter schools in the city, is taking a big lease at 33 Nassau Avenue (which is across the street from McCarren Park, back behind Automotive High). It looks as the organization has leased the entire 16,800-square-foot second floor of the building, and will put its offices and a charter high school in there. (Locally, Believe operates the Believe Northside Charter High School, the Believe Southside Charter High School and the Williamsburg Charter High School – BNCHS opened this year across McCarren Park at Ericsson JHS.)
The Bloomberg Era, Part One
Nate Kensinger nails it.
[During the Bloomberg era], many historic structures were demolished along the industrial waterfront to make way for developers. Neighborhood icons vanished, like the smokestacks of the Long Island City Powerhouse, erased from the skyline in 2005 by luxury condominiums. In Brooklyn, the rapid pace of development claimed so many historic structures that by 2007, the National Trust for Historic Preservation placed Brooklyn’s entire industrial waterfront at the top of their list of “America’s 11 Most Endangered Places,” stating “historic dockyards and factories are being demolished by developers anxious to cash in on the area’s newly hip status.” Some of the industrial structures lost included the Greenpoint Terminal Market – a potential landmark which was burned to the ground in 2006; the Todd Shipyard – a working shipyard demolished in 2006 by Ikea; the Revere Sugar Refinery – a neighborhood icon which guided ships into the Eerie Basin until being demolished in 2007, and the Kent Avenue Powerhouse – a grand structure completely demolished by 2009. Many of the industrial buildings destroyed throughout the decade were functional, stable, useful structures that could have been redeveloped and given a second life.
Greenpoint Hospital Bid Receives Shot in Arm
A private foundation has donated $500,000 to further GREC/St. Nick’s application to redevelop the Greenpoint Hospital site. GREC/St. Nick’s are one of four applicants who have been waiting for almost two years for the City to decide what to do with the site.
Newtown Creek Superfunding: One Week Left for Public Comment
In case you missed it, the EPA is considering Super Fund designation for Newtown Creek. Greenpoint Gazette has the details.
Monkey Town Closing
“Due to landlord issues.”
Do those landlord issues have anything to do with the massive addition being slowly built on top of the restaurant?
[via Real Deal]
DuaneReade Coming to Bedford Avenue
DuaneReade is its bringing new, non-insta-blight, retail look to Bedford Avenue. To the Quadriad building to be specific. Like right across the street from King’s Pharmacy.
Snoozing Brooklyn Squatter Lands in Cuffs
In a truly uninformative piece of reporting, the Post tells us that someone named “Torres” was arrested squatting in a $2,500-a-month apartment in “Williamsburg”. And he wasn’t happy about the lack of heat or the cops who took him away.
But it makes for good headlines, no? (And while they have clearly let their copy editors go, at least Post still pays the headline writers.)
Silent H Closing?
So says the Real Deal.