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  #21  
Old Posted Jan 7, 2013, 8:38 PM
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The public housing blocks might work, but I think restoring the grid and rebuilding the housing like they did in London would be better in terms of social issues and aesthetic.
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  #22  
Old Posted Apr 29, 2013, 8:37 PM
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http://observer.com/2013/04/astoria-...alletts-point/

Astoria Cove Unleashed: 1,535 New Homes Proposed at Halletts Point





By Stephen Jacob Smith
4/26/13


Quote:
The Halletts Point redevelopment proposal to bring 2,644 apartments to a forlorn peninsula of the Queens waterfront has been in the works for three years, but now a different developer is throwing its hat into the ring.

The vaguely-named 2030 Astoria Developers LLC submitted an early application to the Department of City Planning today to rezone another smaller chunk of Halletts Point. They’re calling the project Astoria Cove and they want to build another 1,535 housing units—a combination of townhouses and apartments—on a site overlooking Pot Cove in Astoria, with a pristine view of the Queens leg of the Triborough (RFK) Bridge. Twenty percent of the project, or about 340 units, would be set aside for affordable housing.

“The buildings located along the waterfront,” reads the environmental assessment statement, “would have base heights between 80 to 100 feet that would be topped with towers ranging in height from 120 to 300 feet,” with the buildings further inland topping out at around 80 feet.

In addition to opening up the waterfront—with about twice the 20 feet of space required by the Department of City Planning, according the developer’s lobbyist—the builder is also planning to leave room for a 456-seat public elementary school, and “is exploring providing shuttle service for residents during the weekday a.m. and p.m. peak hours to and from the 30th Avenue station serving the N and Q lines.” (The proposed development is about three-quarters of a mile from the nearest train station.)

Contacted by The Observer this afternoon, Councilman Peter Vallone, who represents Astoria, said that he hasn’t yet thrown his support behind even the first project. The project, he said, “came in at almost twice the size they are now, so for years we’ve been working to whittle it down to something that’s economically feasible for them.”

“That peninsula needs development,” Mr. Vallone said, “and can’t be left as it is. It has dilapidated warehouses on the waterfront. People on the peninsula have no bank, no supermarket.” The developers are planning to build 117,000 square feet of retail, including a 25,000-square foot supermarket.

“But the problem,” Mr. Vallone continued, “is that both of these projects are going to be very large, and until I get commitments from the city”—on transportation infrastructure, especially—“I can’t support them.” He did, however, acknowledge the economic realities of development in the city. “If they can’t come in big,” he said, “they’re not coming in.”
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  #23  
Old Posted Apr 29, 2013, 10:25 PM
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Awesome! Can't wait to see some real renderings!
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  #24  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2013, 2:57 AM
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This is a separate development.

This thread is about Hallets Cove, and Astoria Cove is a separate multi-tower development in the same Astoria neighborhood.

Can the mods split this thread?
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  #25  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2013, 3:09 AM
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^^^ it seems easier to keep track of these (at least in the proposal stages) by keeping them together... maybe when one of them takes off, it might be prudent to split them.

Quote:
The project, he said, “came in at almost twice the size they are now, so for years we’ve been working to whittle it down to something that’s economically feasible for them.”
Politicians in our city brag about denying thousands of people housing, in one of the cities with the most acute housing shortages in the nation. Sigh...
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  #26  
Old Posted May 1, 2013, 12:14 AM
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http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/...icle-1.1331524

Twin projects in western Queens could revamp ‘desolate’ stretch of waterfront
Massive Astoria Cove project unveiled last week; Hallets Point greenlit by city Planning Commission; some local stakeholders fear over-development



By Irving Dejohn
April 30, 2013


Quote:
Developers are converging on a gritty waterfront stretch of Astoria, including an ambitious proposal to line the shore with restaurants, officials said Tuesday.

The Astoria Cove Development, outlined in documents submitted to the city Planning Commission last week, calls for a complete overhaul of 8.7 acres between 4th St. and 8th St. along 26th Ave. near Pot Cove.

Project officials told the Daily News that the overhaul would be a boon for the city. “It’s going to take an area that’s laid fallow for many years and give it life,” said Howard Weiss, the attorney representing 2030 Astoria Developers LLC, the firm that submitted the proposal. “The area is desolate.”

Astoria Cove would include 1,701 units of housing, 117,000-square-feet of retail space and a new school. The East River waterfront would get a major facelift to accommodate eateries and increase public access, Weiss said.

“The project is being very generously developed in terms of public passive recreation,” he said. The firm is headed by Efstathios Valiotis, CEO of management company Alma Realty. A public scoping hearing is scheduled for May 20.

The proposal is part of a one-two punch of private, mixed-use developments that could dramatically change the peninsula near Astoria Park if greenlit by the city. Both developments have pledged to make some of the housing affordable.

The long-discussed Hallets Point development passed an important hurdle last week, receiving initial certification from the Planning Commission. It will go before Community Board 1, the Queens Borough President and the City Council for approval.

Hallets Point would add 2,200 units of housing to the area, a supermarket and a park.

“The Hallets Point project is the result of careful planning, study and considerable community engagement,” said project spokesman Andrew Moesel.

Moesel declined to comment on how it would dovetail with Astoria Cove, noting there wasn’t enough public information about the new proposal.

Some stakeholders expressed concerns about the lack of existing infrastructure and preserving the area’s integrity.

“I want to make sure they’re not too large to overwhelm the surrounding community,” said City Councilman Peter Vallone Jr. (D-Astoria).
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  #27  
Old Posted May 1, 2013, 12:54 AM
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Some stakeholders expressed concerns about the lack of existing infrastructure and preserving the area’s integrity.

“I want to make sure they’re not too large to overwhelm the surrounding community,” said City Councilman Peter Vallone Jr.

I understand the issues with transportation, but you find a way to make this work, not reasons it can't work. There is a shortage of housing in the City, and there aren't a whole lot of places to build it.























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  #28  
Old Posted May 1, 2013, 7:26 AM
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Originally Posted by Hamilton View Post
Politicians in our city brag about denying thousands of people housing, in one of the cities with the most acute housing shortages in the nation. Sigh...
And motivating it with making the project more economically feasible for the developers! wtf?
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  #29  
Old Posted May 25, 2013, 7:01 PM
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http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/...icle-1.1352608

Community Board 1 supports $1 billion Hallets Point project in Astoria —
if developer includes a supermarket and traffic calming

Development will include 2,600 units -- 500 below market rate. A waterfront esplanade is a sweetener.



By Clare Trapasso
May 23, 2013


Quote:
A desolate stretch of the Astoria waterfront is about to get a luxury face-lift.

Community Board 1 unanimously backed the rezoning of a stretch of industrial land along the East River in Astoria so developers can build 10 residential towers along the East River on the western edge of Astoria.

The $1 billion Hallets Point project would create more than 2,100 luxury and almost 500 below-market rate housing units — and a waterfront esplanade that could be lined with cafes and restaurants.

Hallets Point would be near the public housing development Astoria Houses.

The community, on a whole, sees it as a good thing,” said Community Board 1 District Manager Lucille Hartmann. “It’s going to bring a lot of services.”

But the board’s support came with strings attached: Developer Lincoln Equities must include a supermarket in the project, work to ease traffic and create an area for bus parking.

The board would also like to see a facility for young adults and seniors included in the project.

The project must still receive approval from Queens Borough President Helen Marshall, the City Planning Commission and the City Council as it makes its way through the city’s land-use review process. The community board support is only advisory.

If Lincoln gets the approval, it expects to break ground in late 2014 or early 2015.
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  #30  
Old Posted May 27, 2013, 2:19 PM
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I live just north of here on the edge of Astoria Park. The public housing we're speaking of here is some of the best maintained I've seen in the city. I go running through it all the time and it's not the eyesore some might imagine.
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  #31  
Old Posted Aug 23, 2013, 12:25 PM
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http://blog.archpaper.com/wordpress/archives/69404

Zoning Change will Open Door for Sprawling Residential Development in Queens





August 22, 2013
Nicole Anderson

Quote:
Astoria may soon rival its neighbor, Long Island City, as the next major residential waterfront community in Queens. In a unanimous vote, the City Planning Commission has given developer Lincoln Equities Group the green light to move forward with a $1 billion residential housing development on Hallets Point peninsula.

DNAinfo reported that the project would include 2,161 market-rate and 483 affordable apartments as well as a public esplanade along the East River, retail, supermarket, and possibly a public school in NYCHA‘s adjacent Astoria Houses campus.

The proposal still has to win the support of City Council before the developers can proceed with construction. The project is anticipated to be completed by 2022.

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  #32  
Old Posted Aug 24, 2013, 1:31 AM
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Originally Posted by NYguy View Post
Looks like a topographic map
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  #33  
Old Posted Oct 10, 2013, 4:09 PM
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http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/2013...y-city-council

$1 Billion Housing Development for Hallets Point Approved by City Council

By Jeanmarie Evelly
October 9, 2013


Quote:
The City Council voted Wednesday in favor of zoning changes that will make way for a massive $1 billion housing development on the Astoria waterfront and plans to study the possibility of ferry service there..

The council approved the proposal by Lincoln Equities Group, which is planning to construct more than 2,000 apartments, including 483 affordable units, on seven acres of Astoria's Hallets Point peninsula, home to the NYCHA Astoria Houses.

The project also includes more than 68,000 square feet of ground floor retail space, including a 30,000 square-foot supermarket, a landscaped, publicly-accessible esplanade along the East River, space set aside for a potential public school.

City Councilman Peter Vallone Jr., who represents Astoria, said the city has also agreed to commit $500,000 to conduct a study on the feasibility of bringing a ferry service to the peninsula.

He said the service is needed to accommodate the thousands of new residents the development is expected to bring.

"I think we could use ferry service right now," he said.
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  #34  
Old Posted Oct 10, 2013, 7:40 PM
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NYC continues to impress when it comes to getting things done. That's a lot ofnew units, can't wsit to see renderings. Some units shouldhave somevery nice views.
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  #35  
Old Posted Oct 11, 2013, 1:01 AM
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Originally Posted by Flyers2001 View Post
NYC continues to impress when it comes to getting things done. That's a lot ofnew units, can't wsit to see renderings. Some units shouldhave somevery nice views.
It's like a "going out of business" sale for Bloomberg - everything must go, as far as approvals go.



http://www.timesledger.com/stories/2...3_08_30_q.html

Quote:
The residential towers would include 1,921 market-rate units, a few waterfront townhouses and 483 affordable units geared toward senior citizens, according to Lincoln Equities. A publicly accessible park would stretch along the coast as well.





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  #36  
Old Posted Jan 13, 2014, 11:29 PM
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Another piece thrown into the puzzle...


http://therealdeal.com/blog/2014/01/...des-for-26-5m/

Astoria waterfront development site trades for $26.5M





January 13, 2014
By Hiten Samtani


Quote:
Boris Aronov, co-developer of Tribeca’s 101 Leonard Street, has paid $26.5 million for a development site on the Astoria waterfront, according to city records filed Friday. The 160,000-square-foot lot at 3-15 26th Avenue was marketed last year for $80 million as being ripe for an 800,000-square-foot residential site, but it’s currently still zoned for manufacturing, and sources said that the low purchase price was due to uncertainty about when the site would be ready for a residential project.

The site – which was featured in the 1992 sci-fi flop “Freejack,” which starred Rolling Stones legend Mick Jagger as a mercenary – is currently home to a one-story building, but was once a lumber yard.

A source familiar with the deal said that despite multiple bidders, the property had no interim uses without infrastructure upgrade (which could take up to seven years) that could support a purchase price over $30 million. To make a residential project viable, the city would have to build infrastructure such as a connection to the main road and sewage, the source added. Le Noble came close to a deal with a major movie studio, the source said, but the site was too small for such a use.
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  #37  
Old Posted Jan 13, 2014, 11:35 PM
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It's too far away from the subway. I guess that's why the price was low..
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  #38  
Old Posted Jan 14, 2014, 3:26 AM
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It's too far away from the subway. I guess that's why the price was low..
The site is in between two very large developments that are to be built, which makes it a desirable piece of property. But as follows:

Quote:
A source familiar with the deal said that despite multiple bidders, the property had no interim uses without infrastructure upgrade (which could take up to seven years) that could support a purchase price over $30 million.

It's directly to the left of the Astoria Cove development site.

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  #39  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2014, 1:20 AM
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http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/27/ny...rket.html?_r=0

Builders Turn Focus To Housing Market





By CHARLES V BAGLI
SEPT. 26, 2014


Quote:
In a sign of New York City’s rapidly shifting real estate market, the Durst family, whose empire was built on a forest of Manhattan office towers, is plunging into the housing market with an ambitious plan for a sprawling residential development on the Queens waterfront.

The Dursts, whose two skyscrapers on 42nd Street helped fuel the renaissance of Times Square, are now looking to spend $1.5 billion to transform a knobby, windswept peninsula in Astoria, where the East River meets the Harlem River, across the water from Gracie Mansion.

The Dursts’ move to Astoria highlights a trend in the city in which a seemingly insatiable demand for luxury housing has upended the traditional pecking order in the real estate world. Building glamorous office towers for Fortune 500 companies is not the surefire route to fame and riches it once was.

With the cost of land soaring and high-end apartments commanding soaring prices, developers whose reputation and wealth rests on gleaming office towers are leaping into the residential market in the hunt for profits.

Brookfield, a longtime commercial developer whose holdings include the former World Financial Center in Lower Manhattan, is putting down $1 billion for nearly 4,000 apartments in northern Manhattan and on Roosevelt Island.

In Queens, not far from the Durst project, Tishman Speyer Properties, the owner of Rockefeller Center and the Chrysler Building, is planning to build a rental complex with 1,600 apartments. In Downtown Brooklyn, Tishman Speyer is bidding against Vornado Realty and other developers for a former Macy’s property on Fulton and Hoyt Streets with an eye to turning it into a residential project.

The Fisher real estate family, which is also known for its office towers, is turning toward the residential side with the development of a 950-foot-tall condominium tower in TriBeCa and a 37-story apartment building on the East Side.

Although the Dursts have built a few apartment buildings in recent years, the Queens project represents a major, long-term investment in the city’s booming housing market and its first foray outside Manhattan.

Plans call for a set of seven apartment buildings with nearly 2,000 apartments — 20 percent reserved for poor and working-class tenants — an esplanade, a school and a supermarket where industrial buildings now stand.

“Times are changing,” said Douglas Durst, a third-generation developer. “Large-scale office development opportunities are sparse and Manhattan land is cost-prohibitive to build rentals. It is time for the family to go deeper into residential and to cross the ocean to Astoria.”

he Dursts, who own 4 Times Square and 10 other office towers in Manhattan, spent more than a year mulling whether to buy the residential development in what was for them far-off Astoria.

Douglas Durst’s father, Seymour, a prominent developer who died in 1995, used to brag that he could walk to any of his properties from the family’s Midtown office. He built office towers in which his tenants went home at night; residential buildings were “messy” and complicated.

But the family ran out of land in Manhattan after it built the 55-story Bank of America Building at 42nd Street and Avenue of the Americas in 2010.

More than a year ago, Lincoln Equities Group contacted the Dursts, asking if they were interested in buying a residential development it owned in a working-class section of Queens. This week, the Dursts paid well over $100 million for a 90 percent stake in the project. Lincoln will retain about 10 percent.

Known as Hallets Point, the site is next to Astoria Houses, a city housing project built in the 1950s that is home to more than 3,500 residents, and nearly a mile from the nearest subway stop. There are warehouses and a ball field. It is by no means a gentrifying neighborhood.

Joel Bergstein, a principal at Lincoln, spent seven years putting together a string of adjoining industrial properties there and working with residents and city officials on a proposal. Last year, the Bloomberg administration approved his plans.

“The Dursts got it right away,” Mr. Bergstein said. “This will be an iconic property that’ll completely change this portion of the Queens waterfront.”

Hallets Point will eventually have 1,921 apartments, including 483 units for poor and working-class tenants in seven buildings. In an unusual arrangement with the New York City Housing Authority, the developer will build and own two buildings on the grounds of Astoria Houses for affordable housing for older adults.

There will also be three market-rate buildings, ranging from 17 to 31 stories, and two buildings in which 20 percent of the units will be subsidized.


The complex will open up the waterfront to local residents with an esplanade and include a supermarket, retail space and a school. The city has promised better bus service, and there is talk of a ferry to Manhattan.

The plans won the support of elected officials, local residents and the community board. Claudia Coger, president of the Astoria Houses Resident Association, said the neighborhood had a “deserted” feel, because there were few stores and the industrial buildings were closed at night.

“The mere fact that somebody would want to develop over there is a plus for the quality of life for the residents,” Ms. Coger said of Hallets Point. “We gave them our feelings about tall buildings blocking our beautiful Manhattan views and the need for a grocery store. They listened to what we had to say.”

The city’s Planning Commission is expected to vote by the end of the month on a second residential project nearby, Astoria Cove, which includes 1,723 apartments. Like Hallets Point, the developer has promised that 20 percent of the units would be for low- and moderate-income tenants.

But Mayor Bill de Blasio has made affordable housing a high priority of his administration. He and the City Council are expected to push the portion of affordable housing closer to 30 percent before Astoria Cove receives final approval.
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  #40  
Old Posted Jan 26, 2015, 12:31 PM
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Hallets Point Project to Break Ground in October



Quote:
Construction will start this fall on the Hallets Point development, a plan approved by the City Council in 2013 that will include more than 2,000 new apartments. It is one of two proposed residential projects expected to greatly transform the Astoria waterfront in the coming years.

The Durst Organization expects to break ground on the project in October, according a representative for the company. Construction will be done in phases and take about six years to complete.

[...]
=================================
http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/2015...ground-october
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