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  #501  
Old Posted Apr 5, 2024, 5:40 PM
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Executives from The High Line have also written to say that they would like to see “the preservation of key sight lines” from their park and “a space free from buildings that unnecessarily encroach and overwhelm it.”


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  #502  
Old Posted Apr 18, 2024, 5:47 PM
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https://www.northjersey.com/story/ne...s/73360837007/

Casinos at Hudson Yards, Citi Field? Atlantic City casinos see a major threat


Daniel Munoz
April 18, 2024


Quote:
A New Jersey casino executive and the state’s top gaming lobbyist said during a major casino conference Wednesday that a New York City casino could be a “threat” to the gambling industry in New Jersey.

Those remarks by Mark Giannantonio — president of Resorts Casino Hotel in Atlantic City and president of the trade group the Casino Association of New Jersey — echoed similar remarks made by a top gaming executive last year.
Quote:
” They’re going to be Las Vegas-style massive properties and they will generate new business — of course people coming up from South America, Europe, Asia,” Giannantonio told reporters after a panel hosted by the East Coast Gaming Congress at Hard Rock in Atlantic City Wednesday.

“It’s also going to impact eastern Pennsylvania, Atlantic City, Connecticut," he said.
Quote:
New York Mets owner Steve Cohen is lobbying state officials for his plans to build an $8 billion casino with Hard Rock near Citi Field in Queens. Sands has plans for a sprawling casino resort on Long Island, having already completed a long-term lease purchase of property at the site of the Nassau Coliseum.

Meanwhile, Wynn Resorts and developer Related Cos. are partnering with plans for a $12 billion casino at the Hudson Yards area in Manhattan along the Hudson River.

Another casino has been proposed for Times Square, and another on the East Side close to the United Nations world headquarters.

“If it ends up in Manhattan, either Hudson Yards, Times Square or the East Side, it’s going to be fairly devastating, I think, for Atlantic City,” said David Naczycz, executive director of the Fintech and Sports Wagering Innovation Center, based out of Jersey City.

A casino elsewhere in the New York metro area, such as Queens, would be less impactful for Atlantic City, he said.

“The trip from Montclair to far east Queens is just as bad as the trip down to Atlantic City, and there’s more tolls,” Naczycz said.
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  #503  
Old Posted Apr 18, 2024, 10:39 PM
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https://therealdeal.com/new-york/202...y-for-casinos/

City Council approves zoning change to greenlight casinos
Limited-time text amendment removes one hurdle in the process



By Kathryn Brenzel
April 18, 2024


Quote:
One hoop down, several left to jump through

The City Council on Thursday signed off on a zoning text amendment that will remove one hurdle for companies vying for three downstate casino licenses.

The change simply allows a gaming facility to open in manufacturing and commercial districts, something that is not currently permitted under the city’s zoning rules. The amendment is tailored to the current competition, only applying to applications filed for a casino before June 25, 2025.

The City Planning Commission and members of the City Council framed the text amendment as a way to “level the playing field” for casino contenders. It ensures that the Council can’t, on its own, kill a proposal, though it will have sway on other zoning changes needed for some bids and local members will still have a say as part of the state’s approval process.

The change saves casino proposals from going through a separate land use review process to merely exist, even if they include a hotel, which now requires a special permit. The change would also help avoid duplicative and lengthy environmental reviews at the city level before beginning the state process.
Quote:
Ahead of the vote, Council member Kalman Yeger, one of 15 members who voted against the action, characterized the text amendment as a “blank check to applications that we have not reviewed.” He questioned why the council would willingly give up authority over a land use issue.

Some casino proposals already require separate city and state approvals outside the casino application process. Related Companies needs the city to approve zoning changes for its site at Hudson Yards. Steve Cohen’s Willets Point plan and Bally’s proposal in the Bronx are on parkland and require state legislative approval to remove that designation.
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  #504  
Old Posted Apr 22, 2024, 12:53 AM
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More news from the moron contingent, aka CB4…


https://nypost.com/2024/04/21/us-new...tting-slashed/

Quote:
”Now, the applicant, Related Companies, solely in pursuit of casino dollars as a means to fund the platform over the WRY [Western Rail Yards], proposes to amend that plan out of existence in favor of 2 oversize commercial towers, one of a hotel with 1,750 keys, sitting on the equivalent of a 20-story base containing a casino,” said the CB4 letter, signed by chairwoman Jessica Chait and co-land use chairs Jean Daniel-Noland and Paul Devlin.

“ Streets connecting the community will be eliminated… The result will be an inward looking, protected enclave for an inward focused casino, disconnected from the surrounding community.”

In the very least, the developers should consider shrinking the casino project to one hotel with the balance of the project dedicated to apartment buildings instead of office towers, CB4 board members said.

A Related Companies spokesman said, “We are looking forward to continuing to work with the Community Board as this process moves forward – and we are specifically excited to unveil our full community benefits package which is centered around investment in this neighborhood.

“We are proud that our project on the Western Yards will deliver on all of the pledges made in the original zoning including affordable housing, 5.6 acres of green open space, and a public school.”

The housing eliminated to make way for the casino project was planned to be market rate or luxury units — though CB4 officials said Related Companies has tapped real estate tax exemptions in the past to generate “20% to 25%” affordable housing in its developments.
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  #505  
Old Posted Apr 22, 2024, 3:21 AM
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These idiots make me nauseous.

Are their conclusions merely advisory, or can they actually block projects?
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  #506  
Old Posted Apr 22, 2024, 3:54 AM
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Originally Posted by ChiND View Post
These idiots make me nauseous.

Are their conclusions merely advisory, or can they actually block projects?
They’re always just advisory (and for good reason). But now they’re rabid about the luxury housing. Which almost no one demands. The affordable units will be the same as they have always been. But instead of these idiots asking for an increase in affordable units, they’re just demanding that the luxury units be built. They’re not even all out against a casino. They don’t want the office tower to be built.

Keep in mind this is not part of the casino approval process (that comes later), just the change of programming in the site plan.
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  #507  
Old Posted Apr 22, 2024, 11:25 AM
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Thanks. These morons are truly annoying.
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  #508  
Old Posted Apr 22, 2024, 12:51 PM
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https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/22/n...ice-space.html

How Hudson Yards Went From Ghost Town to Office Success Story
The vacancy rate at Hudson Yards’ office towers is considerably lower than in the rest of Manhattan, though its luxury housing and retail offerings have been less successful.






By Matthew Haag
April 22, 2024


Quote:
It was March 2019, and 13,000 people were on Manhattan’s West Side at a star-studded opening ceremony for the largest private real estate project in United States history: Hudson Yards.

A year later, the development was a ghost town.

Shops were closed and offices emptied; the coronavirus pandemic had walloped the corridor of luxury skyscrapers, high-rises and retail near the Hudson River that rose atop a mix of rail yards and parking lots. The roughly $30 billion planned neighborhood looked like it had fizzled before it ever got started.

But now, five years after that grand opening, Hudson Yards has not only survived, but it has also emerged as perhaps the most dominant office market in New York City, a bright spot as companies across the country cut space in the shift to remote and hybrid work. The neighborhood’s glass-and-steel towers have attracted some of the most valuable companies in the world — including BlackRock, Pfizer and Ernst & Young — to pay some of the highest rents in the country.
Quote:
The remarkable turnaround has even won over some of the project’s loudest critics, who had bemoaned the neighborhood as a soulless, inauthentic enclave for the wealthy whose developers received generous property-tax breaks. Skeptics had also predicted that area — bounded by Eighth and 12th Avenues from West 30th to West 42nd Street — was too out of the way for New Yorkers.

Brad Lander, the New York City comptroller, was among those critics. But now? “I got it wrong,” he said.

The success of the office market at Hudson Yards stands in contrast, though, to the other main components of the project, luxury housing and a multistory mall, which have not fared as well. It has also laid bare the widening chasm between the fortunes of the city’s few very-high-end office towers, including those around Grand Central Terminal, and the woes of everyone else.
Quote:
In Hudson Yards, vacancy is under 10 percent, and several buildings are fully occupied. At one building, 50 Hudson Yards, the only available space is on the top floors, with an asking price of more than $200 per square foot per year, almost triple the city average.

The Hudson Yards buildings are largely filled with companies that have mandated a return to the office, and Related Companies, the main developer of Hudson Yards, said that foot traffic at the mall in 2023 had nearly returned to 2019 levels. Employee attendance often exceeds 80 percent on Monday through Thursdays, according to the businesses and developers: similar to rates before Covid and nearly double the rate of other office buildings in the New York City region that are tracked by Kastle Systems.

When the area opened, Mr. Lander worried that the property-tax breaks on new buildings — up to a 40 percent reduction for 20 years — were an unnecessary giveaway to developers. But, he said recently, the development was on track this year to contribute about $300 million more in tax payments than projected to the city’s coffers.
Quote:
Several major companies that have moved to Hudson Yards said that its modern, gigantic office buildings offered advantages over most Manhattan buildings. Until recently, BlackRock, the asset management giant, had 4,000 employees spread over 31 floors in three buildings in Midtown East. Now they are on 15 continuous floors in Hudson Yards.

Ruth Colp-Haber, chief executive of Wharton Property Advisors, a real estate brokerage, said Hudson Yards illustrated the growing divide between the top office towers, known as trophy buildings, and the rest. In Hudson Yards, asking rents can start in the low $100s per square foot per year and skyrocket; the Manhattan average is around $70.

“The majority of tenants cannot afford half this rent,” Ms. Colp-Haber said. “For the very rich companies, they have no problem with this rent, and they are thrilled to be able to move their companies there.”
Quote:
In the 2010s, when Related was in the early stages of building Hudson Yards, company executives believed that its offices would lure companies but that the real moneymakers would be retail, notably its mall and its luxury condominiums. But the script flipped.

Developers have built several luxury apartment buildings, all of which are full or near it. While they include some below-market-rate units, most one-bedroom rentals start around $6,000 a month, far above the city average.

But the luxury condominiums have not performed as well, selling at about half the rate of other condo towers in Manhattan, according to Jonathan J. Miller, the president of Miller Samuel Real Estate Appraisers and Consultants.

Representatives for Related disputed that assessment and said the developer’s own data showed that the buildings were among the top-selling condo towers in the city.
Quote:
The weaker-than-expected condo sales have led Related to reduce the number of luxury units it plans to build in the neighborhood’s last undeveloped tract. The firm wants to create nearly 1,950 fewer residences there than initially planned, though it still plans to build 324 affordable rentals, as it promised city leaders in an agreement from 2009.

“In this day and age, there is a desperate need for more housing,” said Jeffrey LeFrancois, the former chairman of the local community board.

The Shops & Restaurants at Hudson Yards mall opened with a slate of very high-end retailers, anchored by a three-story Neiman Marcus, which signed a 50-year lease as malls nationwide were struggling. But the department store filed for bankruptcy and moved out of the mall in 2020. That space is now being converted into offices for Wells Fargo.
Quote:
The pivots in the housing plans and at the mall are part of Related’s ongoing changes at the development. Recently, the firm rolled out its vision for the last undeveloped area in the neighborhood: a casino and resort. And later this year, the company plans to reopen the Vessel, the 150-foot tall spiraling staircase that was closed off to visitors in 2021 after four people had jumped to their deaths. Floor-to-ceiling steel mesh is being installed as a safety barrier.
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