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  #61  
Old Posted Feb 15, 2007, 1:27 PM
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Daily News

Views, check - but parking? Not yet
EastCoast complex is selling almost too fast


BY DONALD BERTRAND



RockRose's first completed EastCoast highrise in Queens West.


Six months after putting the "For Rent" sign out at the first Rockrose Development tower at Queens West, the 495 units in the 32-story glass tower are almost sold out.

Lack of available parking is what is slowing sales of those units, said Jon McMillan, Rockrose's director of planning.

"What we have left are three-bedroom penthouses that rent for $5,000 to $6,000 and a few other mostly larger units. The people who want to rent them want parking, so we lose that business," said McMillan.

Called EastCoast, the Rockrose share of the Queens West site will have seven buildings with 3,400 units and two parking garages with 1,800 spaces when completed.

"Parking is tough. You have to circle, but it is easier than it is in Manhattan," said Kenneth Eichler, 47, who with his partner and his teenage daughter have a ninth-floo,r two-bedroom-plus/two-bath apartment.

"I lived in Manhattan all my adult life from college on and just moved out here after Thanksgiving. I am a convert. I love it," said Eichler, a government consultant.

"When we moved, one of the concerns was safety for a teenage female," Eichler added. "We asked neighbors and police officers and all said it was safe. I was a little skeptical, but it is so incredibly safe and so people-friendly. It is a wonderful, vibrant neighborhood that is really happening now."

Before moving, Eichler lived at 55th St. and Sutton Place. "I find [EastCoast] is closer to the trains than there and that it takes less time to get to most parts of Manhattan."

The view from Eichler's apartment is hard to beat. Facing the East River, the view takes in a panorama from the Queensboro Bridge to the tip of Manhattan.


McMillan said, "You have to educate your audience about Long Island City and get them over there, but once they are there and see what the views are from the buildings, people are easily sold on the location," said McMillan.

Still, he said, the tenants are a "pioneering bunch."

"You are missing some essential neighborhood services. There is no grocery store.

That will change when the second EastCoast building opens later this year. A yet to be named supermarket and a Duane Reade drug store are scheduled to occupy part of the first floor. It will also have a six story garage.

That will be followed by a 20-story condo with 184 units. To be determined is the makeup of four other buildings on the Rockrose site.

According to McMillan, 50% of the EastCoast renters come from Manhattan, another 30% from outside the tristate area and the remaining 20% are from other parts of the metro area. The average age of a renter is 30.

Rockrose, said Charles Singer, the firm's director of market research, has a tradition of recognizing emerging neighborhoods.

"We did it in Battery Park City, the West Village, the financial district and now Long Island City," he said.

Besides Rockwell, other buildings at Queens West include Citylights, the first building to rise at the site; Avalon Riverview, and an eight-story senior housing complex. A second Avalon Bay is also nearing completion.

In the surrounding area, at least 38 other condominium developments are moving toward completion, said McMillan.
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  #62  
Old Posted Feb 15, 2007, 11:39 PM
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Can't get enough of this...

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LIC #2: The View from the Ground



We've run some shots of the new towers in Long Island City as seen from above, but we figured it's worth sharing the view from the ground too. Seems only yesterday they were holes in the ground. Reports say the Rockrose building that opened last year is almost fully rented, but residents are complaining about parking. We assume the free month of rent hasn't hurt. (Not to worry, though. There's a six-story behemoth coming.) Also coming are a supermarket (no word on the chain) and a Duane Reade. Rockrose says 50 percent of the EastCoast renters have come from Manhattan. Total Rockrose share of the LIC pie when finished--7 buildings with 3,400 units. Avalon Riverview North (the building on the right) did win the topping off race recently, though.
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Old Posted Mar 30, 2007, 11:40 AM
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amny

New life pouring into the waterfront



A development just south of the UN, looking east across the East River.



By Michael Clancy and James Fanelli
March 30, 2007

Short, blue-collar and industrial, the East River has always been outshined by the majestic Hudson River. It's not even technically a river, but a brackish strait connecting the Long Island Sound and upper New York harbor.

But second billing for the East River may soon change. Its banks -- on both the Manhattan and outer borough sides -- are undergoing a profound transformation from underutilized industrial shoreline to the city's new Gold Coast.

"There is more land available and being developed now than perhaps any time in the city's history," said Kent Barwick, president of the Municipal Art Society.

"More than urban renewal. More than Robert Moses. It's just an unbelievable amount of change."

More than 1,000 acres of East River shoreline are being redeveloped or slated for change as housing, parks and office space, creating millions of square feet of commercial, retail and office space along the river.


The sweeping changes represent an enormous opportunity to reclaim the waterfront -- a hallmark of the Bloomberg administration -- but advocates warn there is only one chance to get it right, to create an accessible waterfront that the whole city can enjoy, not just residents of luxury developments.

East River Waterfront Plan

A beach on the East River? That's just one of the new amenities planned for two miles of the neglected East River waterfront, from the Battery Maritime Building on the southern tip of Manhattan to the Lower East Side, which is slated to be revitalized with $150 million of federal 9/11 aid.

Parking lots, dilapidated piers and Department of Sanitation depots will give way to esplanades, walkways and even a sandy beach on the East River as the city reconnects the South Street Seaport, the financial district and Chinatown with the East River.

The city is working to get access to some of the properties, designing other portions, and moving other parts through the public review process, said Rachaele Raynoff, spokeswoman for the Department of City Planning.

Raynoff said to expect an announcement in the coming weeks that one of planned recreation spots will be open this summer.

Even the FDR drive, which hugs the East River, will get new lighting and sound-dampening material attached to its underside so that it looks and sounds a little better as New Yorkers pass under it to get to the river.

Pier 17

While the new leaseholders of South Street Seaport's Pier 17 haven't unveiled any final plans for the riverside site, it is nearly definite that some type of larger structure -- perhaps a high-rise -- will be proposed for the pier, which sits in the shadow of the Brooklyn Bridge.

Meeting with Community Board 1 for the first time earlier this month, General Growth Properties outlined a rough vision for the pier and the former Fulton Fish Market buildings, which would include razing the mall, relocating the landmark Tin Building, shoring up the pier, and building a new mixed-use structure -- possibly a tower that rises 50 stories tall.

East River Science Park

A California-based firm that specializes in laboratory spaces, Alexandria Real Estate Equities plans to break ground next spring on the $400 million East River Science Park, a 1.1 million-square-foot complex that will house laboratories and office space for life sciences businesses and researchers.

The lot currently houses a Bellevue Hospital Center building and a parking lot. The science park will be built on 3.5 acres of city-owned land between 28th and 29th streets and First Avenue and the FDR Drive.

It is envisioned as an incubator for pharmaceutical and biotech businesses, which would find natural partners with NYU Medical Center, Columbia University, and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center among others.

The first tenants are expected to occupy the facility by 2009. The city is expected to kick in about $14 million for infrastructure improvement, and the developers, who have a 49-year lease with two 25-year options, are expected to get tax breaks and other incentives worth more than $250 million.

Con Edison plant area

Along three empty parcels of East River waterfront, stretching from 35th to 41st streets, eight skyscrapers, some as tall as 69 stories, are planned as part of Manhattan's second-largest development after the World Trade Center site.

Developer Sheldon Solow seeks to build 3.54 million square feet of residential space, 1.3 million square feet of commercial space, 28,000 square feet of retail space and 120,000 square feet of 'community space' on the tracts, one of which used to be the site of a Con Ed power plant.

Renowned architects Richard Meier and David Childs are working on designs for some of the skyscrapers. A total of 3,000 new units is envisioned. The developer is preparing his final proposal to begin the zoning approval process.

After hearing Solow's initial plans, Community Board 6 asked that the development be scaled back and include more open space, commercial space, affordable housing and a school.

"It's a question of scale and what is overdevelopment," said Community Board 6 land-use chair Ed Rubin.

United Nations Renovation

Long delayed by bureaucratic red tape, political wrangling and the search for temporary office space, a new building should begin to rise this year as a $1.9 billion renovation gets underway on the iconic United Nations landmark Secretariat and General Assembly buildings.

After unsuccessfully searching for temporary 'swing space' in Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens, the U.N. chose to build that swing space on the northern part of its own campus.

The specific dimensions of the new building are still being hashed out, said U.N. spokeswoman Soung-ah Choi.The renovation, to be done in phases and completed in 2014, presents an opportunity to allow better public access to the waterfront -- a move lauded by open-space advocates but which poses security challenges.

BROOKLYN

In Elias Kazan's 1954 film classic, "On the Waterfront," Marlon Brando plays a guilt-stricken dock worker in a corrupt union who does nothing to prevent a mob rubout.

During the course of his torment, Brando's Terry Malloy delivers an elegiac speech about his washed-up boxing career, indelibly whispering, "I could have been a contender."

Malloy never got that chance at the title, but the inspiration for the film's backdrop, the gritty Brooklyn waterfront once filled with bustling wharves and smoking factories, has a shot at the big time.

Multiple projects are breathing life into miles of fallow land along the East River's edge, ultimately transforming the rundown piers and vacant factories into a tantalizing waterfront destination for thousands of residents and park-goers.

Fueled by sweeping city and state incentives and unprecedented public-private partnerships in Williamsburg, Greenpoint and land near the Brooklyn Bridge, the projects will bring as much as 12,210 units of new housing and 121.1 acres of parkland and esplanades to the borough's waterfront and surrounding area.

Though no time frame has been hammered out, the city also envisions an interconnected series of parks, esplanades and bike paths on the waterfront that will stretch between Newtown Creek in Long Island City and Owl's Head Park in Bay Ridge.

"We do have a vision for a continuous connection of parks and greenways," said Joshua Laird, assistant commissioner of planning at the city Parks Department.

The Herculean overhaul is not without its opponents. Critics have scrutinized some of the city's deals as too favorable to developers. Others like the Manhattan-based Project for Public Spaces, a nonprofit that has consulted on waterfronts around the world, warn that the emphasis on residential developments will ultimately keep people away from the parks.

"It's the suburbanization of Brooklyn," said PPS vice president Ethan Kent. "Residential buildings, especially high rises, are not really compatible with a waterfront. It may look nice and preserve a lot of parkland, but because of the residential adjacencies, they are preventing the parks from being used by the public."

But in an age where tight budgets and few dollars are readily available for public projects, city and state agencies argue that private housing is the most cost efficient and least intrusive way to spur the river's revitalization.

Here's a look at few of the projects:

Williamsburg-Greenpoint:

In May 2005, the city green lighted a wholesale makeover of two miles, or about 175 blocks, of Williamsburg and Greepoint. Its inlands already rife with development projects, the neighborhoods' waterfronts were now open game to the real estate boom.

The rezoning of land to mixed-use will bring luxury condos where weeded vacant lots, old warehouses and factories now stand. Further rezoning also allows for residential developments in the neighborhoods' upland area. In total, 11,000 new housing units will be created, according to the city's Housing Preservation and Development.

There is a tradeoff to allowing 30-story-plus high rises on the waterfront.

Of the 11,000 units, 33 percent will be affordable. On the waterfront, 1,563 of the housing units will be for middle and low-income residents.


Twenty-three months after the rezoning, the waterfront vision is taking shape, with 459 affordable units that have begun or are about to begin construction, according to HPD. L & M Equities has already started work on the first phase of its development, Palmer's Dock, which will bring 294 units, with more than a third of them affordable.

The other community benefit of the rezoning is the creation of 44.1 acres of esplanades and parkland. Among the amenities will be boat launches and stone edges that slope into the water, allowing closer access to the East River.

Though each waterfront developer will build their own section, the Parks Department said it's working with the developers to a make a seamless, interconnected esplanade.


"We want to ensure that it not just be a daisy chain of unrelated esplanades," said assistant Parks Commissioner Laird.

Further incentives make it favorable for developers to deed over the esplanade in exchange for the city taking on liability. The city will also collect fees from developers that will pay for the parkland's upkeep.

While the city has insisted it has been updating the community on its progress, some Community Board 1 members and neighborhood groups say they've been left out of the loop about the rezoning and land being gobbled up by developers.

"There should be greater input in our end," said Christopher Olechowski, the Community Board 1 liaison to the mayor's advisory board on the Brooklyn and Williamsburg rezoning.

Other critics have voiced concern about the indefinite timeline for the creation of esplanades and parks since

"The esplanade won't be developed until the developments are completed," said Marisa Bowe, economic coordinator at Neighbors Allied for Good Growth, a North Brooklyn advocacy group. "That could be 20 years before it's completed."

Brookyn Bridge Park:

After more than 20 years of debating what to do with 1.3 miles of unused piers and empty land between Jay Street and Atlantic Avenue, the city and state agreed in 2002 to give $150 million to help create a scenic park that cuts under Brooklyn Heights' bluff, through the Brooklyn Bridge and ends at the Manhattan Bridge.

But the final product, which includes a marina and a bike path, hasn't settled well with some of the residents in the borough's toniest section or its surrounding neighborhoods.

While the Brooklyn Bridge Park will have 77 acres of parkland, eight acres will be set aside to develop as much as 1,210 luxury condo units, a hotel and other retail space.

Brooklyn residents had expected a portion of the park's upkeep to be paid for with private development, but some had expected it to be in keeping with a 2000 planning document that limited commercial space to restaurants and retail stores.

"This is the first time in the history of the state that private housing has been allowed inside the park borders," said Judy Francis, president of the Brooklyn Bridge Park Defense Fund, which is currently appealing a judicial ruling that upheld the project.

She said the earlier park plan provided for a skating rink, a pool and other amenities that have been scrubbed. She added that the 2000 plan would have had an annual operating cost of just over $9 million. Those costs would have been covered by a mixture of philanthropy and small commercial space, she said.

But the Brooklyn Bridge Development Corp., the state agency in charge of executing the plan, said costs would run higher. The state has pledged $85 million and the city $65 million to build the park, but annual maintenance and operation costs will be $15.19 million.

"The uses included in that 2000 Plan could not have covered the annual maintenance and operations of the Park," said agency spokesman Errol Cockfield. He added that out of all the self-sustaining park plans that BBDC examined, a mix of housing and a a small hotel was the most cost-effective.

"Housing occupies the smallest amount of land while generating the highest return," he said.

Domino Sugar Factory:

The Greenpoint-Williamsburg may have been a sweet deal for housing along the waterfront, but it does have its sticking points, including the preservation of a historic building in the neighborhood.

Built in 1884 and shuttered in 2004, the Domino Sugar factory remains an icon in Williamsburg for its illuminated curlicue sign. But because of its historical significance, the building has spawned a housing battle as its current owner, CPC Resources, determines how to turn the former factory into a residential development.

While some advocates want CPC Resources to build the maximum amount of affordable housing, others want the developer to preserve the factory as much as possible.

"We're trying to develop something that's responsible in terms of affordable housing and in terms of preservation," said Richard Edmonds, a spokesman for the CPC Resources, a subsidiary of Community Preservation Corp., an affordable housing developer.

Edmonds said the developer will unveil its plans in the coming weeks.

However, he did say that more than 20% of the development's units will be affordable housing.
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  #64  
Old Posted Mar 30, 2007, 12:02 PM
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More images from the AMNY article...



Panorama of East River, looking toward Queens.




Looking east across the East River.







Looking west at the East River




Looking across the East River to the Kent Ave development in Williamsburg.







Kent Ave development in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.










Looking east at the Kent Ave development in Williamsburg, Brooklyn from East River Park







South Street Seaport area along the East River.
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  #65  
Old Posted Mar 30, 2007, 7:39 PM
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Those pics are great. I'm happy to see development in BK and Queens, should only add more to the NYC area.
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  #66  
Old Posted Mar 31, 2007, 12:33 AM
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Originally Posted by Thskyscraper View Post
Those pics are great. I'm happy to see development in BK and Queens, should only add more to the NYC area.
Just the tip of the iceberg. When the Silvercup towers and others get underway, people will be both surprised and amazed at how quickly that skyline grew up...




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  #67  
Old Posted Apr 3, 2007, 9:48 PM
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It looks like a neat project, but it also looks like a long walk from the nearest subway station. The nearest subway is under the Citigroup skyscraper isn't it?

The area immediately around it also looks almost like a no-man's-land, which makes 70k square feet of retail surprising.
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Old Posted Apr 4, 2007, 5:58 AM
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All of this waterfront construction is insane. I really like this proposal, the design is pretty awesome.
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Old Posted Apr 4, 2007, 12:07 PM
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Originally Posted by J. Will View Post
It looks like a neat project, but it also looks like a long walk from the nearest subway station. The nearest subway is under the Citigroup skyscraper isn't it?

The area immediately around it also looks almost like a no-man's-land, which makes 70k square feet of retail surprising.
There's a subway stop closer to the river. The fact that it was a no-man's-land is what makes all the construction possible. Similar to what's about to take place on Manhattan's west side.
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Old Posted Apr 23, 2007, 11:40 PM
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APRIL 22, 2007


The soon-to-be-expanding Silvercup Studios...




Residential highrise construction boom on the LIC riverfront

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Old Posted Jul 2, 2007, 12:31 PM
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http://www.therealdeal.net/issues/JU...1183150240.php

Plot thickens in Hollywood East
Silvercup, Steiner and Kaufman studios plan to double NY shooting spaces




A rendering of Silvercup West, a 2.7-million-square-foot project that will break ground in 2008.


By Sushil Cheema


Soaring high above the Queensboro Bridge, the giant Silvercup Studios logo -- New York's answer to California's famous Hollywood sign -- stands like a sentinel over the beige brick building where many iconic modern films were made.

Amid half-empty warehouses, industrial businesses and taxi parking garages, this slice of Long Island City is where the Devil put on Prada, Harry met Sally and the Godfather met his end. Carrie, Samantha, Charlotte and Miranda mulled over their sex lives, and Tony Soprano took care of business.

But the growth of the entertainment industry in the city is facing some tough realities, with space fetching a bigger premium than stardom.

Demand is reaching record levels for shooting in the city, and Silvercup and New York's two other major studios -- Steiner Studios and Kaufman Astoria Studios -- are planning to add about 979,000 more square feet of studio space to the city's current 1.21 million square feet, bringing the total to 2.19 million square feet.


Silvercup is planning a $1 billion expansion that will add 650,000 square feet to its current facilities. Steiner Studios, the city's newest studio, will expand from its current 310,000 square feet with the addition of 289,000 square feet. Kaufman Astoria Studios, the home of "Sesame Street," has 500,000 square feet of space and plans to add an 18,000-square-foot stage and about 22,000 square feet of support and office space.

Silvercup began creating new TV and film characters after the networks announced their television lineups, and the busy shooting season started recently, says Alan Suna, Silvercup's founder and chief executive officer. That means cash will keep coming in, but an awful lot of it will have to go out to meet the studio's expansion needs.

Building and maintaining studio space is expensive because of the equipment involved, says Doug Steiner, the chairman of Steiner Studios. "It's like a four-star hotel for very, very demanding clientele." New facilities in New York, he added, are "way more expensive to build than in L.A."

Up until a few years ago, films about New York were shot in other cities and countries, according to Katherine Oliver, commissioner of the Mayor's Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting. The long-running television show "Seinfeld" took place in New York, but apart from a few exterior shots in the opening credits, it was shot in Los Angeles.

City tax incentives put in place in 2004 have played an integral role in luring production business back to New York, which now has a $5 billion film industry that employs about 100,000 people. The new law created a 5 percent refundable tax credit for production companies to claim for those who work behind the scenes, such as production and camera crews, makeup artists and legions of assistants, says Steiner, who lobbied hard for the bill's passage. The new bill added to a 10 percent state tax credit passed in 2003.

The number of film, television show, commercial and music video shoots in New York City reached a record high of nearly 35,000 shoot days in 2006, according to figures from Oliver's office.

"It's more financially reasonable for producers" to shoot in New York, says Suna, who also advocated for the legislation. Previously, the cost of production in the city drove producers to choose other cities, like L.A., Chicago, Boston and Washington, D.C. Canada was also a popular choice because of the weak Canadian dollar. As its value has strengthened, the benefits of choosing that location have diminished, Suna says.

Actual numbers regarding studio space rent rates and construction rates are hard to come by, but Steiner makes a few comparisons to put it in perspective. The spaces, he says, rent for "a lot less than you'd think, and a lot less than in L.A." He did say that production office space in New York City overall is in "the low teens per square foot gross." The industry, he added, "is a very tightfisted business."

Studios can accommodate multiple projects at once. Television shows typically rent per week, and commercials and music videos rent by day, Suna says. Parking space, office space and studios can be rented out individually based on necessity. And the studios deal directly with the production coordinators and producers on the projects. "It is not a brokerage-driven business," Steiner says, and independent brokers are not typically involved in the rental negotiations.

Silvercup Bakery was the original occupant of what is now Silvercup Studios, which was converted to its present form in 1983. Over the past two decades, it has established itself among the leading production facilities in the U.S. Spread over two lots, Silvercup has 18 separate studio spaces, ranging in size from 3,000 to 18,000 square feet.

Expansion plans will create Silvercup West, a 2.7-million-square-foot new construction, multipurpose space that will include studios, residences, offices and parking. The project will break ground in 2008.

Queens also has the 1920-vintage Kaufman Astoria Studios, which was founded by early East Coast film mogul Adolph Zukor and eventually taken over by Paramount Studios. A postwar period of disuse ended when a nonprofit organization reopened it for the 1977 production of "The Wiz." In 1980, real estate developer George Kaufman expanded and rebuilt the studio in Astoria. Today it has six stages, as well as office, studio and support space. Current plans for expansion include a building that will house a new stage and 22,000 square feet of support and office space.

Built from the bottom up in 2004, Steiner says that Steiner Studios "were the first purpose-built stages [in New York] in about 50 years." Located at the Brooklyn Navy Yard near Williamsburg, Clinton Hill and Fort Greene, Steiner Studios has plans to grow by adding a 250,000-square foot adjacent building, says Steiner. Steiner currently has about 100,000 square feet of sound stages and 185,000 square feet of office space, make-up rooms, mill shops and other space.

"We have plans to become a full-blown Hollywood-style lot, to become the media district for New York City," says Steiner. The studio's best-known productions to date fittingly include the movie version of "The Producers."

Accessible and abundant resources are another reason shooting in New York makes sense.

"New York is one of the greatest cities in the world," Suna says. "It has a pool of acting talent, directorial talent and writing talent that make homes here and are less gypsy-like."

And do the studio heads think the boom will last?

"We do," Suna says, "or else we wouldn't be planning on doubling our size."
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Old Posted Jan 15, 2008, 4:32 AM
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I ran across the Land Use Application for Silvercup West at:

http://www.ci.nyc.ny.us/html/dcp/pdf.../ulurp_q02.pdf

It's dated "As of 01/08/08." Can we take that to mean this project is still alive and well?
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Old Posted Jan 15, 2008, 1:31 PM
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Can we take that to mean this project is still alive and well?
I never thought that it wasn't. It's not supposed to begin until early 2009. This development is largely a studio expansion. Lately, all of the major studios in the city have been expanding. That could only be good news for New York.
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Old Posted Jan 15, 2008, 6:12 PM
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2009? All the sites that discuss the project that Google brought up said it was to start in early 2008. I guess there was a delay...
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Old Posted Jan 16, 2008, 2:26 PM
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Originally Posted by CoolCzech View Post
2009? All the sites that discuss the project that Google brought up said it was to start in early 2008. I guess there was a delay...
Probably a mistake. Either in the original thread, or earlier in this one, it was given as 2009.
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  #76  
Old Posted Jan 16, 2008, 2:28 PM
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Originally Posted by NYguy View Post
Just another look at the awesome potential of the east river skylines...
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  #77  
Old Posted Feb 11, 2008, 10:11 PM
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http://archrecord.construction.com/n.../080211nyc.asp

Richard Rogers Treading Water on NYC Riverfronts

February 11, 2008
By Alec Appelbaum

Frank Gehry has one, so do Jean Nouvel and Norman Foster. Renzo Piano has two. But last month, when New York’s governor scrapped a convention center expansion project, Richard Rogers—who joined Piano in electrifying Paris with the Pompidou Center during the early 1970s—remained a Pritzker Prize winner who has worked in New York City without a finished project to show for it.

The project was an expansion of I.M. Pei’s 1986 Jacob K. Javits Convention Center, nearly doubling its 790,000 square feet of exhibition space and creating a waterfront promenade along the Hudson River. Since Rogers’ scheme was unveiled in 2006, though, estimated construction costs ballooned twofold to $3.2 billion—prompting Governor Eliot Spitzer to cancel the project on January 31 in favor of a more modest 100,000-square-foot addition that will stay within the original budget.

The Javits expansion was one of three long-gestating developments that would have brought Rogers’ grand waterfront promenades to the Big Apple’s skuzzy edges. In 2005, he co-led a study for a city-sponsored project to liven downtown Manhattan’s South Street waterfront under an elevated highway on the East River. And in 2006, the city approved his design for residences, retail, and film production facilities at Silvercup Studios on the river’s opposite bank, in Queens.

All three waterfront projects could still happen—some day, in some form. At Javits, Rogers and FXFowle will remain at work on the smaller expansion under an amended contract, says Empire State Development Corporation spokesperson Warner Johnston. At South Street, meanwhile, Rogers decided against bidding to work on the actual design of the $150 million project, which local partner SHoP Architects and Ken Smith Landscape Architects are executing this year. “I don’t think it was a very large project for them,” SHoP partner Gregg Pasquarelli observes.

Despite delays, Silvercup Studios is still championing Rogers’ plan for a new district called Silvercup West. It includes restores the landmark 1892 New York Architectural Terra Cotta Company building and converting it into a soundstage, then surrounding the structure with three towers containing 1,000 apartments, offices, and a retail-rich esplanade. Proponents of the 2-million-square-foot, $1 billion project had initially hoped that construction would begin this year. But Silvercup CEO Alan Suna says that it’s taken a year longer than expected to secure permission to enter the site and test the soil at an old power plant that Silvercup intends to demolish.

Should Rogers feel accursed? Not necessarily. Pasquarelli says that fits and starts come with the territory for anyone who works at such a large scale. “That’s the nature of design at the highest level. A lot of projects don’t move forward. You only notice because Rogers is at such a high caliber and everyone was excited about what he was going to do.”

If anything, demand for work by Rogers and other high-profile international architects remains strong, adds Foster + Partners’ Michael Wurzel. “People really appreciate the fact that architects from around the world are working in the city,” he says. “I think there’s a sense of a new skyline.”

To that end, Rogers may get his own gleaming tower before any of his waterfront esplanades open: he is one of three architects, along with Foster and Fumihiko Mahi, who have designed towers for the World Trade Center site. Developer Larry Silverstein has promised that excavation work on the towers will begin within weeks, keeping pace for a 2012 opening.
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“Office buildings are our factories – whether for tech, creative or traditional industries we must continue to grow our modern factories to create new jobs,” said United States Senator Chuck Schumer.
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  #78  
Old Posted Feb 11, 2008, 10:30 PM
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http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2008/02...ferred_in.html

Developer’s Dreams Deferred in Long Island City
Twilight for Silvercup West?





Long Island City won't be transitioning from Next Big Thing to Big Thing quite as quickly as some were planning. In August 2006, Alan and Stuart Suna, the brothers who run Silvercup Studios near the Queensboro Bridge, unveiled city-approved plans for Silvercup West: a new soundstage and offices and 1,000 apartments (150 priced for people of moderate means), plus retail, a gym, and an esplanade on the waterfront, all designed by Pritzker Prize–winning architect Richard Rogers and set to begin construction in 2008. But it's taken a year, Silvercup CEO Alan Suna says, to get permission to enter the site and test the soil around a power plant the team will have to clear.

And now that the builders have gotten into the dirt, they've discovered that the bedrock was not where they expected it to be. Is there something toxic in there? Nobody will say. So when will we get this handsome new neighborhood? “We really can't give a target date at this point,” says Silvercup spokesperson Cara Marino Gentile. Adds Rogers spokesperson Paul Stelmaszczyk, “We are not currently working on any adjustments to the design.” That’s the sound of a project stalling out. LIC loft-dwellers have a little more time, it seems, to relish that pioneer spirit. —Alec Appelbaum
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“Office buildings are our factories – whether for tech, creative or traditional industries we must continue to grow our modern factories to create new jobs,” said United States Senator Chuck Schumer.
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  #79  
Old Posted Feb 11, 2008, 11:00 PM
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  #80  
Old Posted Feb 11, 2008, 11:03 PM
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Ny is turning into the city of a lotta hype.
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