NEW YORK | Hallets Point (7 tower development) | FT | 20 - 40 FLOORS
The approval process for this one will begin next year, which is rapidly approaching.
http://www.lincolnequities.com/portf...ueens-new-york Halletts Point - Astoria, Queens, New York Lincoln Equities Group has successfully assembled a 7 acre waterfront site in Astoria, Queens, New York. Development of former industrial site will include: ■Seven multi-family residential buildings containing 1,800 units. ■20% of units will be set aside for inclusionary affordable housing. ■Neighborhood retail development in the form of a community supermarket, drug store, restaurants, etc. ■A 40 foot wide, beautifully landscaped public waterfront esplanade park with pedestrian walkways and bike paths, accessible by the entire community. ■A variety of building heights ranging from twenty to forty stories, with many set backs and view corridors to allow light and air. ■Accommodations for a water taxi stop on the current East River loop. ■Panoramic views of Manhattan over the East River. Other key elements: ■Being developed in partnership with Grosvenor Investment Management US Inc. (http://www.grosvenor.com). ■Currently undergoing New York City’s ULURP and CEQR entitlement process. ■Located in the vibrant community of Astoria, with a multitude of restaurants, cafes, and shops. ■Astoria Blvd./27th Avenue will lead into a beautiful landscaped public plaza with retail shops and restaurants in an outdoor setting. ■Designed to knit into the fabric of the community in an effort to welcome the diverse neighborhood to share in the beautiful public spaces of Halletts Point. |
http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/...sEnabled=false
Ambitious residential and commercial project proposed for Astoria waterfront ‘Hallets Point’ would provide 2,300 units of market-rate and affordable housing http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopo..._485/image.jpg BY Clare Trapasso December 22 2011 Quote:
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Definitely good news. Seven new towers for the Queens waterfront, ranging up to 40 floors.
Sounds like the Long Island City skyline will extend up to the northernmost reaches of Astoria. Queens is really developing very quickly. And Astoria is, in many ways, already a very desirable neighborhood, with a lot more amenities and character than most nearby neighborhoods. I think these towers will do quite well. |
Interesting project. It would be great to see something like this happen, that is if the market and bureaucracy will allow it.
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Bureaucracy? Meaning allowing NIMBYists to insinuate themselves the the process? I don't know, as I'm not quite sure if this corner of (unofficial) GreekTown NYC is populated with that sort of human being.
The market, as we all know, is anther matter entirely with a life of its own. Luckily the Big Apple seems to have been spared the brunt of the downturn...Or else, ambitious projects like One57 would've died a *long* time ago. But that's another debate appropriate for at least twenty dozen other NYC threads on this forum..or so it seems IMO. |
The entire neighborhood good be made into something grand if only the public housing were torn down... I think one of the most important things NYC can do going into the future is to tear down all the public housing projects (replacing them with the same amount of units, except in a much denser fashion) and restore the original street grid. There is so much open space left unused... even more public housing (beyond simple replacement units) wouldn't be a problem if the land could be redeveloped at something like 5 times the current density.
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I like the mixed income deal too. I would get two units, one for when I feel like "The Donald" and another for when I feel like an old Astoria neighborhood feel à la "Archie Bunker".
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This particular development seems to have local and political support. And it's a step towards the often talked about integration of the city's public housing with other developments. It can be a rare oppurtunity in the city to get something done without the usual fighting that comes with it.
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http://www.qchron.com/editions/weste...a5f8c71c3.html
Hallets Point in final stages of design Thousands of new units would be built Feb 2, 2012 by Paula Neudorf Quote:
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If the public housing remains, I don't know why any middle or upper-income people would want to live there.
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The Upper East Side, Upper West Side, Midtown, Chelsea and East Village all have public housing, for example. It's not unusual at all to have multimillion apartments across from public housing. |
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http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/2012...ost-from-state
Massive Hallets Point Development Project Gets Boost from State June 28, 2012 By Ewa Kern-Jedrychowska Quote:
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http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/...sEnabled=false
Proposed residential developments could transform the western Astoria waterfront Projects would add thousands of housing units and shops to the currently 'underedeveloped' East River district http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopo...s23q-2-web.jpg By Clare Trapasso August 23, 2012 Quote:
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http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/2012...n-nycha-campus
Hallets Point Development May Include New School on NYCHA Campus http://assets.dnainfo.com/generated/...age640x480.jpg December 19, 2012 By Jeanmarie Evelly Quote:
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The Halletts Point development in Astoria – overview and photos
QNYC by Meg Cotner The Halletts Point development has been back in the news recently. First, what is Halletts Point? It’s a new development planned for the waterfront along the land mass called Hallett’s Point, a peninsula that juts out into the East River (GMAP) just south of Astoria Park. It is home to the Astoria Houses, Build it Green! and a few other businesses (including the mysterious Hellgate Filming Studios), and Whitey Ford Field. Here are some of the elements in this development: Lincoln Equities is the developer. Costs are estimated at $1 billion The development could create jobs though construction and later, retail. The mixed-use development is slated to have eight buildings on ten acres. Three of the buildings would be on existing NYCHA property (Astoria Houses) Seven of the buildings would be residential, containing 2,200 apartments 20% of the units would be affordable housing, geared toward seniors. The other 80% of the units would be market rate housing. Heights of the buildings would range from 20 to 40 stories. Other elements of the development could include a K-8 public school; retail, including a supermarket, drug store and restaurants; and a landscaped public esplanade along the East River. An on-street bus layover facility would be built to accommodate increased transit needs. Some streets would be remapped. A water taxi dock (maybe an East River Ferry stop?) is also a possibility. Parking is planned for the development. http://queensnyc.com/wp-content/uplo...ria-queens.jpg Image source: NYC.gov A document called Halletts Point Rezoning Environmental Impact Statement Draft Scope of Work was released and it is chock full of information about the site and the plans for the development and area. Here is a segment from this (quite long) document that talks about the site in more detail, and gives you an idea of the area as it is now. The WF [Waterfront] Parcel, Eastern Parcel, and Buildings 6, 7, and 8 on the NYCHA Parcel comprise a total of approximately 420,000 sf (9.65 acres); Buildings 1 through 5 on the WF and Eastern Parcels are approximately 343,000 sf (7.87 acres, including land underwater) and Buildings 6 through 8 on the NYCHA Parcel are approximately 92,659 sf (2.13 acres). The Eastern Parcel is occupied by an electronics and ink toner company, who is expected to vacate. The WF Parcel contains three building structures and three open lots. It is predominantly vacant but portions of this waterfront parcel have been leased to two tenants for construction and telecommunications storage and parking on a short-term or month-to-month lease agreement. The waterfront along the project site consists of structural bulkheads and soil embankments armored with large stone rip-rap or construction debris. An existing platform and bulkhead extend approximately 175 feet north from the southern tip of the site. The bulkhead and platform are in good overall structural condition. The remainder of the waterfront along the waterfront parcel consists of a soil embankment lined with large stone rip-rap. Buildings 1 through 5 are currently zoned M1-1, permitting light industrial uses subject to performance standards common to all M1 districts. Buildings 6 through 8 are zoned R6 and contain parking lots, trash compactors, walkways, and a small amount of landscaped area within the Astoria Houses campus. The Astoria Houses contains 22 six- and seven-story residential buildings on an approximately 27-acre campus with a total of 1,103 residential units, as well as surface parking lots, a day care center and senior center, basketball courts and playgrounds, walkways, and other landscaped areas. The campus was completed in 1951. The NYCHA Rezoning Area is also located within the Astoria Houses campus. Whitey Ford Field is an approximately 3.6-acre park bounded by the East River, 26th Avenue, and 2nd Street, containing a baseball field, bleachers, and open lawn area. It is under the jurisdiction of the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR), although it is not mapped parkland. Whitey Ford Field is currently zoned R6. The Parks Parcel consists of a portion of the Hallet’s Cove Playground, which contains an asphalt baseball field and basketball courts. The approximately 10-foot wide alienated Parks Parcel that would be incorporated as part of the project includes a number of trees, the park perimeter fence, and a portion of the perimeter sidewalk and baseball field back stop area. The Parks Parcel would be incorporated in the NYCHA Astoria Houses campus as part of the proposed project. Back in December, there was a public scoping session at the Goodwill Astoria Headquarters (GMAP), which is located in the Astoria Houses. The next step for the development is to go through the city’s formal Uniform Land Use Review Procedure (ULURP), which Linh Do, of the consulting firm AKRF, believes will happen in February 2013. After that, Community Board 1 will preside over the ULURP. If all goes well, the developers could break ground as early as 2014. The project could be completed by 2022, nine years from now. Local opinions about the development range from support, neutrality, and caution. Bishop Mitchell Taylor, who is among other things, CEO of the East River Development Alliance (ERDA), a not-for-profit that he founded (2004) “to expand economic opportunity for public housing residents,” supports the development and said, “The project is only going to enhance (public housing’s) footprint.” Community Board 1 has not taken a position on the proposal. Senator Michael Gianaris, (he represents Halletts Point), supports the project, though is concerned that existing services and infrastructure could be stressed. Still, he says the growth “helps boost our economy by attracting more jobs as well as residents to fill them.” Astoria City Councilman Peter Vallone hasn’t taken a side, though (however, his father, Vallone Sr., is a consultant to the developer). Transit and transportation issues are something to consider - the developers have included parking the plan, and it sounds like additional bus service is planned (one of the buses that travels there now is the Q103, and this development could be enough to extend its schedule). But will that be enough public transportation? This patch of land is located over a mile from the closest N/Q subway stop, so direct subway access is not likely a practical form of transportation for residents here (bus to subway is the current option). Perhaps they will also implement a subway shuttle – Shore Towers (GMAP), the established development just south of Astoria Park, has done such a thing. On the subject of transportation, there are plans to adjust the streets in this area. Again, from the Halletts Point Rezoning Environmental Impact Statement Draft Scope of Work document. Most notably, Astoria Boulevard would be connected through the Astoria Houses: A portion of 27th Avenue, located west of 1st Street and currently used as accessory parking for adjacent businesses, would be demapped and transformed into a pedestrian waterfront access corridor. The portion of 26th Avenue west of 1st Street would also be demapped and transformed into a pedestrian waterfront access corridor. In addition, a new connecting street segment between existing mapped portions of Astoria Boulevard is proposed on the NYCHA parcel. Between 1st Street and 8th Street, Astoria Boulevard would be two-directional with one lane in either direction. Parking may be added along some segments of the street, depending on required street widths and the location of existing mature trees. To the north, 26th Avenue would become one-way eastbound between 1st and 2nd Streets. Between 26th and 27th Avenues, 1st Street would become one way northbound and 2nd Street would become one-way southbound. Third and 4th Streets would remain unchanged in their directionality between 26th and 27th Avenues. http://queensnyc.com/wp-content/uplo...ria-queens.jpg Image source: NYC.gov http://queensnyc.com/wp-content/uplo...ria-queens.jpg Image source: NYC.gov |
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