Monday, April 18, 2011
Break the law & CB7 will grandfather the travesty. Way to go CB7!
We're back! Because we deserve to know who's who & what's what.
Sunday, August 23, 2009
Another MONSTROSITY at 7th Ave & 42nd St.
Monday, June 22, 2009
Hiding the cash, one monstrosity at a time...
Pictures from Brownstoner.com- September 22, 2008
Commentary from SunsetPark-Brooklyn-Matters
This sad scenario has played out on 6th Avenue & 54th Street (exact address to come). This block has now been hit twice by greedy and tasteless owners (see blue awning to stage-left/your right of new building). Unfortunately, this facade teardown & additional floor would be legal under the proposed R6A re-zoning, the commercial overlay or commercial use of the 1st floor would not be allowed. These unscrupulous owners will continue to deface block after block even if all they gain is 1 or 2 more housing units into which they'll dangerously pile up many times the allowed number of people. As to devaluing (in dollars) adjacent properties, it hasn't been the case. There are so many other morally and aesthetically-bankrupt buyers whose need to hide ill-gotten cash is so dire that property values won't suffer. Housing prices in Sunset Park (Flushing , Manhattan's Chinatown or other cash-rich enclaves, for that matter) haven't decreased as in other parts of NYC or the nation. What will suffer is the racial, ethnic, generational and economic diversity of Sunset Park that we so want to preserve, as well as it's architectural and aesthetic context, of course, . If this abuse continues, only buyers looking to hide cash from questionable sources will occupy Sunset Park. This an occupation, folks- and it's being enabled by our own governmental agencies: Buildings Dept., DEP, Dept. of City Planning, City Council, and so on. We wonder what the reaction would be if the above monstrosity was attempted on the Mayor's block or next to the homes of the City's Commissioners or Council Members. Legal or not, would it be allowed to go on? We wonder.
Monday, June 15, 2009
WHAT WILL YOUR BLOCK LOOK LIKE IF THE PROPOSED RE-ZONING PLAN IS APPROVED? LOOK UP YOUR BLOCK BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE!
- GO TO: http://www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/html/sunset_park/sunset3.shtml
- CLICK ON THE MAP TO ENLARGE VIEW
- LOCATE YOUR BLOCK AND JOT DOWN THE PROPOSED ZONING DESIGNATION(S)
- LOOK-UP THE DETAILS ABOUT EACH DESIGNATION ON THE SAME PAGE AS MAP.
- PAY CLOSE ATTENTION TO CATEGORIES R6A, R6B, R7A.
- AFTER YOU CHECK YOUR BLOCK, LOOK AT THE AVENUES. IF YOU DON'T LIKE WHAT'S BEING PROPOSED, TALK TO YOUR NEIGHBORS & WRITE TO THE NEW YORK TIMES, THE DAILY NEWS, COUNCILWOMAN SARA GONZALEZ, BKLYN BOROUGH PRESIDENT MARTY MARKOWITZ, CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT CHRISTINE QUINN, MAYOR BLOOMBERG, STATE SENATOR ERIC ADAMS, STATE ASSEMBLYMAN FELIX ORTIZ- JUST DON'T STAY SILENT.
- FOR EXAMPLE- R7A IS BEING PROPOSED FOR 7TH AVENUE.
- NYC Zoning Handbook:
Residential Districts: R7A
R7A districts provide greater lot coverage and lower height and setback regulations than R7 districts. Typical buildings are bulky, six- to eight-story apartment houses that are compatible with existing buildings found in older neighborhoods. R7A districts are mapped along Woodhaven Boulevard and sections of Rockaway Park in Queens.
The FAR in R7A districts is 4.0. The street wall of a building must be located within a mandated front wall setback area of eight feet on a wide street or 15 feet on a narrow street. The maximum building height is determined by the building envelope which may not be penetrated by the building. The building envelope is controlled by the intersection of front and rear sky exposure planes that rise according to a specific ratio. The Quality Housing Program is mandatory in R7A districts.
- Schematic Illustration (7-story R7A Quality Housing building)←click on orange letters to reveal drawing
- Typical R7A Development (photo)←click on orange letters to reveal photo
Basic Data
R7A: General residence district- Maximum FAR: 4.0
- Maximum lot coverage:
- Corner lot: 80%
- Interior or through-lot: 65%
- Maximum front wall setback:
- Wide street: 8 feet
- Narrow street. 15 feet
- Minimum lot area per DU: 169 square feet
- Maximum DUs per acre: 258
- Required parking: 50% of dwelling units
- Quality Housing Program: Mandatory
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Dear Anonymous-
Friday, June 5, 2009
LOOK UP YOUR BLOCK ON THE PLANNING DEPT'S PROPOSED REZONING PLAN MAP
- GO TO: http://www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/html/sunset_park/sunset3.shtml
- CLICK ON THE MAP TO ENLARGE VIEW
- LOCATE YOUR BLOCK AND JOT DOWN THE PROPOSED ZONING DESIGNATION(S)
- LOOK-UP THE DETAILS ABOUT EACH DESIGNATION ON THE SAME PAGE AS MAP.
- PAY CLOSE ATTENTION TO CATEGORIES R6A, R6B, R7A.
- AFTER YOU CHECK YOUR BLOCK, LOOK AT THE AVENUES.
- COME TO THE HEARING AT BOROUGH HALL AT 5:00 PM ON WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10TH
R6A districts differ from R6 districts primarily in greater lot coverage and modified height and setback regulations. These typically produce six-story apartment buildings designed to be compatible with existing buildings found in older neighborhoods. The R6A district is mapped primarily in Brooklyn and Queens; Prospect Park Southwest in Brooklyn is a typical R6A street.
The FAR in R6A districts is 3.0. The street wall of a building must be located within a mandated front wall setback area of eight feet on a wide street or 15 feet on a narrow street. The maximum building height is determined by the building envelope which may not be penetrated by the building. The building envelope is controlled by the intersection of front and rear sky exposure planes that rise according to a specific ratio. The Quality Housing Program is mandatory in R6A districts.
Basic Data
R6A: General residence district
- Maximum FAR: 3.0
- Maximum lot coverage:
- Corner lot. 80%
- Interior lot or through-lot. 65%
- Maximum front wall setback:
- Wide street: 8 feet
- Narrow street: 15 feet
- Minimum lot area per DU: 227 square feet
- Maximum DUs per acre: 192
- Required parking: One per dwelling unit or 50% of dwelling units if grouped
- Quality Housing Program: Mandatory