Posted Feb 25, 2014, 5:49 PM
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Homo sapiens sapiens
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Join Date: May 2012
Location: 3rd planet from the Sun
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NEW YORK | Lower Concourse Waterfront Redevelopment (138th-149th St)
NY Daily News:
Ruben Diaz Jr. calls for redevelopment of South Bronx waterfront
The borough president and SoBRO have preliminary plans to redevelop the Lower Concourse
BY DENIS SLATTERY / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2014, 2:00 AM
A preliminary rendering of one of the waterfront properties along the Harlem River in the Port Morris section of the South Bronx.
Quote:
Imagine walking over to the waterfront on a hot summer night, putting down a blanket and watching a movie under the stars, steps from Yankee Stadium. Or moving into a gleaming new tower with stunning views of the Manhattan skyline and ready access to the Harlem River.
Those plans — and others — are far from fruition, but Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. believes they’re closer than one might imagine.
At his annual State of the Borough address, Diaz called for an industrial stretch of Exterior St. between 138th St. and 149th St. to be transformed into a mixed-use waterfront district that he likened to Brooklyn Bridge Park.
“Bronxites should have quality waterfront access, and this project could make that happen,” Diaz said.
The former manufacturing zone was rezoned in 2009 by the city Planning Commission to allow for commercial and residential redevelopment.
The non-profit South Bronx Overall Economic Development Corporation, or SoBRO, used a state grant to study 15 properties within the so-called Lower Concourse Special Harlem River Waterfront District.
The planning report was finished in January, and now Diaz will use it as a blueprint to start drumming up support among city agencies and developers.
The site could be used for more than 2,000 units of housing, 1.5 million square feet of commercial space and 500,000 square feet of community facility space, public parks and waterfront access, the group said in its preliminary analysis.
“The current proposal provides this community, and the affected property owners, with a vision for the future of this waterfront and the road map of how the vision can become a reality,” said Lourdes Zapata, the senior vice president of SoBRO.
The group has been meeting with property owners to gauge interest, Zapata said, and at least two have expressed interest.
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Artist's rendering of waterfront development along the Harlem River in the South Bronx.
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