Developers Getting Rubber-Stamped City Approvals Despite Public Opposition
In the latest example of rampant developers getting everything they want from the city, 19 parking spaces are removed from West 237th Street and Blackstone Avenue
Bronx, NY It seems that the Department of Transportation never says no to a developer. Despite a letter from Assemblyman Dinowitz in November 2018, DOT has approved a request from real estate developers to remove every adjacent parking space (19 in total) to their lot at the corner of West 237th Street and Blackstone Avenue. The parking spaces are already being filled by massive concrete barriers demarcating a pedestrian walkway, raising questions from community residents of why the developer needs to occupy the sidewalk at all.
Over the past several years, the Northwest Bronx has seen a tremendous rise in the number of new developments being proposed and constructed. Typically, these building applications are first processed by the Department of Buildings and, in certain cases, the Department of City Planning. Permits are then requested from the Department of Transportation if the property developer wants to use sidewalk or street space for their construction equipment. Rarely, if ever, are these permits denied by DOT.
Compounding the difficulty for members of the public to figure out what is going on in their own neighborhood, real estate developers frequently mask their identities through a variety of limited liability corporations (LLCs). This makes it more difficult for neighbors to raise concerns as they happen, such as excessive losses of parking or construction noise. Local residents are commonly directed to file complaints with 311 that are forwarded to the same city agencies which approved the permits in the first place, often resulting in a frustrating and circular process that does not resolve concerns.
Department of Transportation has issued numerous permits to Cipco Developers along Blackstone Avenue and West 237th Street, adjacent to the lot, valid from March 13, 2019 until May 13, 2019 (permits for concrete barriers extend until June 9, 2019). Historically, DOT has readily granted extensions to street permits on behalf of developers. The permits include permission to place jersey barriers and fences on both Blackstone Avenue and West 237th Street, a construction office trailer on West 237th Street, and permit occupation of the sidewalk for unspecified stipulated conditions. A request for more information from DOT about the developers justification was not responded to at the time this release was issued.
Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz (D - Bronx) said: I am sick and tired of developers running roughshod over our neighborhoods, and city agencies just rubber stamping whatever they want to do. When an agency is quicker to respond to a developer who wants to take away 19 parking spaces than they are to the community who wants to know why this is happening, that is a problem. This goes beyond the parking, even though removing 19 spaces from an area which already lacks sufficient parking to meet demand is a problem. This is about the future of our neighborhoods.
If a developer doesnt have enough space to fit their equipment on their own vacant property without infringing on public space, then maybe their building is too large. Maybe we need to be considering construction impacts when we evaluate whether to approve new building construction. People move to our communities and invest in their homes in our communities because we have a beautiful balance of density and open space. If we continue to let developers tear into our communities without any kind of government check on their proposals, we will lose the very essence of what makes them a desirable place to live.