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  #21  
Old Posted Oct 4, 2013, 1:41 PM
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That's better and you can see the views will be great. Here's that link...

http://ny.curbed.com/archives/2013/1...tours.php#more






And here are the other 2 again for comparison...






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  #22  
Old Posted Nov 26, 2013, 12:54 PM
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http://brooklyn.ny1.com/content/news...ity-opposition

Plan For High Rise In Prospect Lefferts Gardens Meets Community Opposition





By: Jeanine Ramirez
11/25/2013


Quote:
A towering new residential and retail building will dramatically change the landscape in Central Brooklyn, but it is not without opposition.

There are big plans for a vacant parking facility on Flatbush Avenue: a 23-story high rise that will dwarf Prospect Lefferts Gardens and tower over nearby Prospect Park.

A community group called Prospect Park East Network says that the development is out of scale for the neighborhood and will ruin the park experience.

"We don't want a tower shadowing it and feeling like we're in the middle of Manhattan," said resident Brenda Edwards.


"It's a very intimate community. It's low rise. People are very neighborly," said resident Suki Cheong. "This tower is going to really be visible from many of these scenic views by the lake.

"The group put together its own rendering to dramatize the impact to the park and is asking residents to sign a petition to stop the project, but the developer says that the building was designed to fit into the community. It'll have a brick facade instead of glass and metal. It'll be ground-floor retail with 254 rental apartments, with 20 percent for low- and middle-income tenants. It also follows city zoning rules for the area.

"We haven't asked for any special variances, so what we're doing is as-of-right zoning," said Alison Novak, vice president of Hudson Companies. "And I think that when City Planning put together the zoning code, they were very careful about light and air and shadows. So I don't think that that will be actually a major issue."

However, the Prospect Park Alliance, which helps oversee the park, says "We feel a 23-story building on the edge of the park will compromise the original Olmstead and Vaux vision for the park as an urban refuge where the public can enjoy unspoiled natural views."

Both the Alliance and community opponents are calling for zoning changes.

"We are the only section next to the park that does not have what we call contextual zoning," said resident Carole Schaffer. "All of the other areas - Park Slope, Windsor Terrace, everything around the perimeter - has it."

The city says that it's received requests about rezoning and will look into the possibilities. In the meantime, the developer says that he has all the permits and money to move ahead, and plans on starting demolition by the end of the year.



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  #23  
Old Posted Dec 19, 2013, 12:13 AM
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http://www.brownstoner.com/blog/2013...ferts-gardens/

Group Says It Plans to Sue Over Planned High-Rise Development in Prospect Lefferts Gardens


by Cate
12/18/13


Quote:
A group of residents and community groups said yesterday they intend to sue to stop development of a planned 23-story luxury tower at 626 Flatbush Avenue in Prospect Lefferts Gardens. The suit against New York State Housing Finance Agency and developer Hudson Companies Inc. contends that more than $72 million in public funds were approved for the development without a “proper environmental impact study as required by state law,” according to a press release sent out by the group.

“The building in Prospect Lefferts Gardens would be in the midst of a neighborhood that is otherwise largely comprised of six-story or smaller buildings, and would present serious economic and environmental issues for the historic neighborhood,” the release continued.

The group includes the Prospect Park East Network, Flatbush Development Corporation, Flatbush Tenant Coalition and Prospect Lefferts Gardens Neighborhood Association, among others. The group plans to hold a press conference to announce its lawsuit Thursday at 11 am in Chester Court.

The development by Hudson Companies is as-of-right, which means it complies with all existing zoning regulations and does not need any special permits or variances.
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  #24  
Old Posted Jan 16, 2014, 1:07 PM
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Early stages of demo has begun here this week.
     
     
  #25  
Old Posted Feb 2, 2014, 3:24 PM
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Demo should be complete soon.


©tectonic
     
     
  #26  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2014, 9:56 AM
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Thanks for the update.
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  #27  
Old Posted Apr 3, 2014, 2:18 AM
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Brownstoner:

Locals Plan Town Hall Meeting With Borough President on High-Rise
By Cate 04/02/14 11:30am

Quote:
Community group Prospect East Network has arranged a town hall meeting with Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams about high-rise development near Prospect Park in Prospect Lefferts Gardens.

PEN has said it wants Hudson Companies to lower the height of its planned 23-story tower at 626 Flatbush to nine stories, which it says is “the current zoning limit for new development in all the other neighborhoods surrounding Prospect Park,” and make 30 percent of the units affordable. They also want to downzone Flatbush and Ocean avenues so new developments would not rise higher than 80 feet.

When we stopped by a week ago at 626 Flatbush, above, the site had been cleared but construction had not yet started. The planned development is as-of-right, which means it complies with existing zoning and does not need any variances.

The meeting will take place from 7 to 9 pm on Monday, April 7 at the John Hus Moravian Church at 153 Ocean Avenue.




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  #28  
Old Posted Apr 3, 2014, 2:24 AM
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NIMBYs are really pathetic.

The tower is as-of-right, so there's nothing the Borough President can do. They can appeal to the Pope or Obama while they're at it.

And that rendering is obviously massively exaggerated. The building will look nothing like that from the park.

Then they top off the idiocy by calling for 80-foot height limits on major Brooklyn thoroughfares (basically 7 floors), and then simultaneously complain about high prices and rising rents. Well, gee, I'm sure calling for no new development will really drop those home prices...
     
     
  #29  
Old Posted Apr 3, 2014, 2:28 AM
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^^^ I was thinking the same! I was counting the floors and lol'd. If Brownstoner didn't take the demo pics, I wouldn't have bothered to post at all.
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  #30  
Old Posted Apr 5, 2014, 8:29 PM
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Excavators on site this week.
     
     
  #31  
Old Posted Apr 8, 2014, 3:57 PM
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Boy, I can't really take these NIMBYs, but I have to read this stuff...



http://ny.curbed.com/archives/2014/0...of_control.php

PLG Residents Call Planned 23-Story Tower 'Out of Control'









Tuesday, April 8, 2014
by Curbed Staff


Quote:
"Irresponsible" and "out of control" were just a few ways neighbors described the 23-story residential tower planned for 626 Flatbush Avenue, between Fenimore and Hawthorne Streets just a block from Prospect Park. Last night during a standing-room only town hall meeting organized by the Prospect Park East Network, residents of Prospect Lefferts Gardens expressed their deep disapproval of the development, which was first announced by developer Hudson Companies last summer. A number of city officials and politicians, including Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, were there to hear their concerns—and boy, did they get an earful.

Alicia Bond, a resident who moved to the neighborhood after getting priced out of Boerum Hill, fell in love with Prospect Lefferts Gardens because there were "no tall buildings." Prospect Park was also a huge draw because she feels when you're there you can really "believe for a second you're not in the city." Her voice rose as she vowed to fight the development every step of the way, even going as far as saying if the fight led her to jail, she'd go "because that's my park, that's our park."

That sense of possessiveness was shared by many attendees at the meeting, who talked about feeling at home in the racially diverse neighborhood and wanting development to be contextual with all the other low-rise buildings. The problem is, as Prospect Park East is currently zoned, developers can build as high as they want without seeking community approval.

Not so on the west side of the neighborhood where zoning limits building heights—which is driving all the development east. The site of Hudson Companies' planned project is currently occupied by medical offices and a parking lot. The tower would rise on the parking lot, which abuts the below-grade subway tracks that run between Ocean and Flatbush Avenues. The buildings along Ocean that face Prospect Park are six-stories tall, so 626 Flatbush would more than double their height. To halt the development, Prospect Park East Network (PPEN) has filed a lawsuit challenging the developer's right to build on environmental grounds. They also point out that since the developers are using nearly $72 million in state bonds to fund the project, they should be accountable to the community.

In the short-term, PPEN is seeking a moratorium on construction until they can get a rezoning to limit building height to eight or nine stories. Residents and Community Board 9 have been asking for a rezoning since 2008, but according to PPEN, the Department of City Planning (which reviews zoning applications), told them they had many other zoning requests to consider and they had to wait.

In the meantime, residents are fighting to keep their neighborhood from turning into a mini-Manhattan, where one former Manhattanite said all the high-rise buildings made him feel like a "caged animal." In Prospect Lefferts Gardens, he continued, the "sky is dynamic and a part of the life we live here." Huge buildings would alter the skyline and the park irrevocably.

But park views were not the only concern; affordable rent was another huge issue. Rising rents follow the wave of gentrification rolling through many parts of the city, especially Brooklyn, and residents spoke ominously about being priced out of the community. "As rents rise people become homeless," said one woman. Proposed rents for Hudson Companies' 23-story tower (in which 80 percent of the apartments would have market rate rents and 20 percent affordable) would be $1,875 for a studio, $2,200 for a one-bedroom apartment, and $2,800 for a two-bedroom apartment. Attendees chuckled loudly at the notion that these prices would be affordable. To give some perspective, an industrious renter can find a studio in Prospect Lefferts Gardens for $1,175, or a one-bedroom for $1,500.

The clock is ticking, as Curbed reported last month, there are at least six other developments in the pipeline. These buildings are "as of right" so there will be no stopping them once they go up. But residents and elected officials did stress they aren't against development or affordable housing, they simply aren't willing to accept just any type of building in exchange for a handful of affordable units. "[We're] not interested in affordable housing in 80-story buildings," said Brooklyn Borough President, Eric Adams.





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  #32  
Old Posted Apr 8, 2014, 5:11 PM
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I live in this neighborhood, I am pro development and progress. I think it is too late to stop this one but I do support the height restrictions around the park. We all know this would not happen on the other side of the park. That's what the goal should be at this point, limit the heights all around the park. 626 will be a beast but we will get used to it, the 'taller' buildings a block north aren't pretty either.

My biggest concern and this is citywide, is whether the infrastructure is keeping up with the pace of the city's growth.
     
     
  #33  
Old Posted Apr 28, 2014, 10:46 PM
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04.28.14

©tectonic
     
     
  #34  
Old Posted Apr 29, 2014, 1:16 PM
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  #35  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2014, 6:12 AM
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Nasty. This is something they build back in the 70's.
     
     
  #36  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2014, 11:39 AM
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You will definitely see this one from the park and it will not be pretty.
     
     
  #37  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2014, 12:24 PM
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That "rendering" is from the NIMBYs, so you can bet it's baloney.

You can tell it's crap because in the real world, those buildings to the left are about the same height (and probably bigger bulk) as the new building, and here they're less than half the size.

There's also a giant, 40 floor tower a few blocks away, that mysteriously doesn't exist in the rendering.
     
     
  #38  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2014, 12:32 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Crawford View Post
That "rendering" is from the NIMBYs, so you can bet it's baloney.

You can tell it's crap because in the real world, those buildings to the left are about the same height (and probably bigger bulk) as the new building, and here they're less than half the size.

There's also a giant, 40 floor tower a few blocks away, that mysteriously doesn't exist in the rendering.

That's not an actual official render, just something thrown together.

But yeah, it will be visible from the park, but so what?
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  #39  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2014, 12:40 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Crawford View Post
That "rendering" is from the NIMBYs, so you can bet it's baloney.

You can tell it's crap because in the real world, those buildings to the left are about the same height (and probably bigger bulk) as the new building, and here they're less than half the size.

There's also a giant, 40 floor tower a few blocks away, that mysteriously doesn't exist in the rendering.
If you're referring to Tivoli Towers on Franklin Avenue, you can't see it from that angle.
     
     
  #40  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2014, 12:52 PM
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Originally Posted by Tectonic View Post
If you're referring to Tivoli Towers on Franklin Avenue, you can't see it from that angle.
Well, if you turn around, you won't see 626 either...problem solved.
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