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法拉盛下一个奇迹:威利点

已有 25553 次阅读2010-8-13 07:36 |个人分类:法拉盛|系统分类:文学分享到微信

    从曼哈顿乘坐7号地铁到法拉盛,多数乘客都会看到,列车即将进入法拉盛总站的时候,铁路左边是一大片废旧汽车修理工厂、废铁回收工厂区。那些破铜烂铁,不但影响市容,也许还影响风水,旁边就是著名的“花旗球场”Citi Field,与纽约这个国际大都会形象很不相称。

法拉盛下一个奇迹:威利点_图1-1

    尤其是铁路对面天景豪苑(Skyview Parc)豪宅推出,据说今年10月即将入伙,旁边的烂铁场更显得怪异。

法拉盛下一个奇迹:威利点_图1-2

    今天《侨报》记者邹斌报道,纽约市政府经过数月的谈判,终于成功收购烂铁场威利点的四个地产,取得该区域80%的控制权,看来市政府多年的心血,可能有了新的进展。

      目前的现状是,花旗球场每场球赛的数万观众,一旦球赛结束,或者开车或者乘坐7号快车迅速离开。花旗球场的座位是41800个,含站位的最大容量是45000人,对面还有US Open体育馆,这些爱好体育的人群,与近在咫尺的法拉盛,目前基本上不会发生关系,一片烂铁场、一条小河将他们的目光阻隔了。

  一旦威利点开发,法拉盛市区将和“花旗球场”连成一片,法拉盛河将成为本区的内河,而不是边界,法拉盛更加融入纽约的主流,从而获得更好的发展前景。

  (说明:所有图片以及下面两篇文章,均来自网络)

附件1:

威利点开发
市府成功收购最争议四房产

州府公听会临时取消惹疑云

    【侨报记者邹斌8月12日纽约报道】 市府12日宣布在近几个月中成功收购了位于法拉盛威利点的四处房产,为其30亿美元的威利点开发大型计划(见上图)的第一阶段铺平道路。据了解,市府成功 收购的3万平方英尺的四处土地将帮助市府在威利点开发中争议最大的西南角方向区域争取到80%的土地控制权。但原订本周由州府牵头举行的威利点公听会被临 时突然取消,令人生疑。

  威利点的西南角方向长期以来一直被废车场、汽车修理业、仓库及其他行业的商家占据,威利点的整体开发计划使得这 些商家抗议连连,认为其扼杀了他们的生活及生存。威利点的西南角区域也自然成为纽约市府推进开发计划的“瓶颈”。此次市府经过数月谈判,成功收购4处土 地,使得政府拥有西南角方向总计22英亩土地的80%所有权。

  备受关注的原订在本周举行的威利点开发案公听会临时被取消,使得威利点众 多商家抱怨连连,此次公听会主要的焦点是讨论关于位于威利点附近的范威克快速道路(Van Wyck Expressway)架设红灯及交通改制问题。但 是很多商家希望通过此次公听会呼吁纽约州府派独立的监管机构来重新审计此计划。当地商家代表理查(Richard Lipsky)表示,此项开发计划需要 长时间的规划和核算,但是“任何事情或交易都不能关起门来做”。此次公听会原本是由纽约州参议员、州交通委员会主任马丁·马拉维·迪朗 (Martin Malave Dilan)主持,但是在公听会举办前两天被临时取消,马丁的发言人解释原因时只是提到“日程冲突”。

  当地的商家希望纽约市经济发展局和纽约州交通局能够提供更加透明的环境评估报告,来决定威利点的命运。纽约市经济发展局将在9月初提供评估报告,随后将报告公示给民众审议。但最终将由纽约州交通厅和联邦高速公路局最后审议此案。

   据了解,占地62英亩的威利点位于皇后区北部法拉盛河半岛,独到的地理位置使其具有可观的发展前景。可是因为该地区扩散的环境污染,在过去几十年中,虽 然包括法拉盛市区在内的其周边地区经历了翻天覆地的变化,威利点却没有从这生机勃勃的发展中得到任何利益。2004年,市政府组建了威利点顾问协会,并由 皇后区区长海伦·马歇尔担任主席,以帮助解决威利点的城市计划重建工作。这一合作计划建立了详细的目标和准则,以建立多用途的,生机勃勃的威利点社区。威 利点开发获得市长彭博支持。

  该重建计划提议包括:数以千计的可供不同收入人群居住的房屋、令人兴奋的零售业和娱乐便利设施、一个全新的高品质宾馆、纽约市的首个非曼哈顿会议中心、办公地点、开放式公园及操场、一个全新的公立学校以满足增长的社区需要、LEED认证合格的绿色建筑及设施等。

  威利点重建计划将在及其周边社区创造许多经济机会。该多用途项目将创造数以千计的永久性工作及建筑工作,使威利点成为该区域新的闹区。威利点重建计划总计三十年的财政预算估计将超过42亿美元。


附件2:英文网站2008年最详尽的报道

来自:http://noticingnewyork.blogspot.com

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Will It Come? What the Bloomberg Administration Wills at Willets Point (Part I)


We are wondering why the Bloomberg administration wants to put the Willets Point Iron Triangle auto parts and repair district out of existence. The city wants to use eminent domain to do so.

Even a lot of wondering doesn’t make the answer obvious, but it leaves us wondering whether there are better alternatives. If there are better alternatives, as we think there are, we have to wonder whether the City Council has done its job.

This is a long post so be prepared to spend some time with this subject. The reward is that we have done our best to deal comprehensively with a subject which we understand a lot of people may not know much about. Most other reporting has been in much shorter stories. Because this piece is long, we have for the sake of convenience and ease of bookmaking, divided it into four sections. The sections flow into each other since the subject matter doesn’t readily divide itself up. If you are inclined to take a reading break, wherever you do will probably be as good as anywhere else.

Economic Downturn and Jobs at Willets Point

It is a time of economic downturn. The 62 acre* area is the home of 250 businesses which employ, it is variously reported, 1,000, 1,200, 1,300, 1,700, 1,711, 1,800 or 3,000 people. (The 1,300 figure is supposed to be the city’s though some of its documents use higher figures like 1,800. The 3,000 figure is the Willets Point Industry and Realty Association’s.) The area property owners pay taxes and receive minimal services that probably cost the city very little.

* (We will return to discuss at length the issue of how many acres are involved.)

It is only a single-story low-rise area but it is tightly packed with bustling businesses. One Sunday morning not long ago a few businesses were closed at about 10:30, but enough were open so that the whole area had a busy thriving feel to it. The jobs are blue collar. Arguable they are green collar since, technically, there is a lot of recycling going on. You don’t get the feeling that the jobs are Monday through Friday, 9 to 5.




An Isolated Area

The area is hemmed in and separated from other areas of the city on all but one side by isolating elevated major highways running along the waterfront. The elevated highways interfere with whatever enjoyment of the waterfront might be possible. On the last remaining side, the district is set apart and isolated by the newly constructed Citifield which has been built as a replacement for the Mets’ Shea Stadium. Shea Stadium was not a pretty stadium. We don’t know if Shea needed to be replaced, but it is not surprising that its replacement is better-looking. Nevertheless, it is still a stadium and not likely to be the best neighbor. The vast stadium parking lots make up about two-thirds of this final wall that completes the isolation of the Willets Point Iron Triangle area.

Relocating or Eliminating the Businesses?

Why in a time of economic downturn is it so important to the city to go after and try to eliminate a functioning economic district within the city that is working well to provide jobs? Is it that the city feels that the 250 businesses should not exist? Ostensibly that is not the case since, in theory, the city will be providing relocation payments to the businesses. (The city recently offered a $3 million relocation fund which has been described as insultingly low.) Why “relocate” what should not exist? That is perhaps not such a neat equation for more than one reason. It is doubtful that the relocation payments will adequately compensate the businesses for moving. That payments are being made at all is probably more a political salve. Also, once dispersed by relocation the businesses will probably never achieve again the kind of synergy that makes them work the way the interrelated businesses all co-located in the same area now work. A Hunter College study described the area as a "unique regional destination" for auto parts and repairs. Bottom line: “Relocation” probably means that a lot of the businesses will cease to exist when dislocated.

What would it actually cost to relocate the businesses? By one report an early study said it would cost $130 million to relocate the businesses of Willets Point at that time counting them as 83 in number. (See: City Plans Big-time Makeover for Flushing, By Donald Bertrand Daily News Staff Writer, November 19, 2003.) This figure, though it should be factored into a total assessment of the total cost associated with relocating the businesses, is apparently not actually a statement of relocation costs. It apparently refers to the estimated cost of buying the land under them. As far as we can tell, a 2003 city document this might have been taken from “Comprehensive plan for downtown Flushing” is no longer where it was once posted on the web: (http://www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/html/pub/flusing.html)(83 is likely the number of property owners, not businesses, the report found to be in the area.)

The $130 million figure which represents the cost of compensation for the real estate ownership interests would go mostly to property owners. Many of the businesses lease rather than own their space and would not receive any substantial compensation out of that amount. The true figure for the cost of relocation would have to fold in other costs associated with moving the businesses the amount of which would be much more important to the businesses that are leasing their premises. With 250 businesses $130 million would come to $520,000 per business but a City Economic Development Corporation survey reportedly calculates that over 60 percent of the Willets Point's owners are leasing their property to others (See: Yes! Redevelop Willets Point, by Julia Vitullo-Martin, September 2008.)

So, added to the $130 million figure above is the actual relocation $3 million fund which will be much more important to the average business in the Willets Point Iron Triangle. How much on or off the mark is the proposed $3 million relocation fund figure that has been described as insulting low? It has been pointed that, evenly divided, that comes to a mere $12,000 in relocation per business. It is predicted by plan opponents that smaller businesses might get only $9,000. As noted, there is a difference between land owners and renters since renters have a particularly rough go in terms of ever being reimbursed for anything.

The city currently plans to establish a larger fund ($5 million) to cover the effects of “traffic mitigation” in connection with the plan than it plans to establish for relocation. (See: June 30, 2008, Willets Point project faces key test Monday night, by Daniel Massey, Crains New York.)

(For a longer description of current conditions in Willets Pont see: Melting the Iron Triangle: Amid Willets Point 'blight,' pride and vow to fight redevelopment, by Jarrett Murphy, Tuesday, June 6, 2006)



Relocate Where?

If relocation rather than elimination is truly the city’s honest objective, is there a better place for the businesses to go than where they are now? Some would more cruelly shorthand the description to refer to the businesses as “junk yards” rather than describing them as “green collar recycling.” That probably shortchanges their value, but the businesses would likely be rejected as such if and when they try to relocate themselves into many other neighborhoods. Even though the businesses may perform useful functions for society, how many good citizens will embrace them as neighbors? Does it then make sense that having found a neighborhood where they have virtually no neighbors, the city now wants to eject them from them from it? Will they find such a perfect fit again?

Bloomberg Administration Fought to Overcome City Council Opposition; Why?

The City Council was for a long time widely reported to be resistant to approving a plan that involved eminent domain. Whatever tactics of persuasion were used by the Bloomberg administration, the City Council just voted to permit the use of eminent domain to rid the area of these businesses. Without elaborating on what would likely be important details, the New York Times reported that the Bloomberg administration “spent considerable time and money in recent weeks to arrange support for the plan.” (See: Willets Point Project Foes Reach Deal With the City, by Fernanda Santos, November 12, 2008)

Is the city so bursting at the seams in this time of economic downturn that there are no other places in the area to develop and a 60-acre development can’t wait? Does approval mean that the city has all the necessary resources to proceed so that this should take priority over all the other opportunities that might be available? What makes this such a good area to develop that eminent domain should be used to remove the businesses for what might replace them?

City View of Willets Point as Extension of Downtown Flushing Development: Muss Development

The city views the development as an extension of Downtown Flushing, which is on the other side of the remnant of Flushing Creek, now sometimes referred to as the Flushing River. What is left of the waterway is a canal/inlet at the south end of Flushing Bay. It passes under the Van Wyck Expressway, which also separates the Willets Point Iron Triangle from Downtown Flushing.

Development is going on in Downtown Flushing, but nothing on the scale of the large island of development proposed for the Willets Point triangle. Downtown Flushing development doesn’t use eminent domain. It is driven by what is permitted under the current zoning. Most of the development that has occurred has been done by local Korean and Chinese developers. A more ambitious development is being done by Muss Development, which is doing a project for on the edge of the neighborhood for which it will receive brownfield clean-up tax credits. Interestingly, though the Muss project is all the way over on the Downtown Flushing side of the creek, a New York Sun article provides this description of the project: “The development is planned for a site near the No. 7 subway line, and is within walking distance of Shea Stadium and Flushing Meadows-Corona Park.” (See: Developer Plans $600M Queens Project, by Staff Reporter of the Sun, February 10, 2005)

According to the Sun, the Muss “complex, located at the corner of College Point Boulevard and Roosevelt Avenue along an abandoned industrial strip” and will be:
a $600 million mixed-use development on a 14-acre brownfield site in Flushing, it announced yesterday. The project will create 725,000 square feet of retail space, six condominium and rental buildings with 1,000 residential units, and a 55-footwide waterfront esplanade along the Flushing River.
Willets Point a Separate Neighborhood?


The Willets Point development the city is proposing does not really seem like an extension of the Downtown Flushing development that has occurred to date. It may rather have more in common with the as yet uncompleted Muss development. Or it may be viewed as something more separate and apart. The city Economic Development Corporation also prominently described the proposed development as a separate neighborhood “Willets Point is poised to become New York City’s next great neighborhood.” although the city says that this would be “Through an area-wide approach to redevelopment.”

Vision of the “Next Great Neighborhood

The proposed development is supposed to have the “first non-Manhattan convention center ” (talked about as being 125,000 square feet) and a “high quality” hotel (talked about at different times as being 250 rooms or 700 rooms). There are supposed to 5,500 housing units. 500,000 square feet of office space is also being talked about. The development is supposed to contain a new school. The City EDC site speaks of the development as including “open space, parks, and playgrounds.” In respect thereto the Bloomberg administration released information to the press in May of 2007 saying there would be, according to the Times, a two-acre park. From the city’s renderings it appears that the Flushing Creek wetlands around the highways would be preserved. It is also proposed to create a new pedestrian bridge over the creek, connecting it to Flushing. A city rendering shows the pedestrian bridge going underneath the elevated Van Wyck Expressway to connect to the redeveloped area. In time, the area surrounding the Flushing side of the pedestrian bridge is likely to be more developed and the city says it is planning to clean up and revitalize the waterfront in that area. (The pedestrian bridge idea may be on a back burner since newer renderings don’t show it.)


Residential units, 15% for Above-Average Income Families Overcomes Eminent Domain Abuse Objections

Previously it looked as if the issue of eminent domain was going to pose an insurmountable hurdle to the Bloomberg administration’s procurement of City Council approval for the plan. Approval was obtained when a promise was made to set aside additional housing units that are to be considered affordable.

Almost invariably, when low-income units are provided by developers it is done so in conjunction with programs that meet the requirements of federal tax code benefits. The same would be expected here as a matter of course. For federal tax code purposes at least 20% of the units under these programs must be set aside for households with incomes at 50% or less of the local Area Median Income (AMI), adjusted for family size. Such financing is a limited resource, but the math works out that if it is available a developer will opt for it. If the financing is not available, the developer probably won’t proceed at all. Resources to finance units under these programs are scarce though it is likely the city is hoping that the financing may become less scarce with Democrats and an Obama administration in Washington.

The accord that was reached to allow eminent domain was based on an agreement that in addition to the 20% of the units that would normally be required as affordable housing under the federal programs, an additional 15% of the units will be set aside for families who make less than 130 percent of the city’s median income. In other words: families with the above-average incomes that would currently be $99,840 a year for a family four (less for a smaller family and more for a larger one). Is that below the income for which the Flushing market would provide units on its own? That question and whether these additional units would be subsidized are worth thinking about.

We will revisit this City Council compromise in a bit.

Enough Residential Units to Create a Workable Neighborhood?

When they are eventually constructed, the proposed 5,500 housing units should be sufficient in number to comprise a workable neighborhood unto itself. When they are all constructed, the number will be sufficient to support services. An insufficient number of services was a criticism when Roosevelt Island, starting up in the 1970's, had only an initial 2,141 units; also when Battery Park City was just being built. The Battery Park City situation was less problematic in that it was near already existing developments and more connected with the rest of the city in other ways.

Challenges of Building at Willets Point

The proposed Willets Point development is close enough to the LaGuardia Airport flight path so the buildings there will have to be moderate in height rather than hi-rise. The land will be more expensive to build on than typical because piles will have to be driven deep into the soft soil. Low-rise buildings will make it harder to amortize the cost of the site preparation, but unless bedrock is reached the soft soil conditions are another reason not to build hi-rises. Construction for residential use will also entail greater-than-usual expenses to reclaim the land environmentally. There is debate about how much cleanup is necessary. Should we suspect that Muss Development, which is doing nearby brownfield clean up on the other side of the creek, would consider itself on the inside track to clean up this area if it were to bid on the development?

One last thing about the problematic nature of building in the triangle area; it is in a flood plain. According to the EDC site: “Most of Willets Point lies within the 100-year flood plain, necessitating a significant increase in grade across the site before modern infrastructure can be installed.”

EDC’s Stated Reasons for Building New Neighborhood at Willets Point

Why does the Bloomberg Administration see the triangle area as a priority area in which to build? The EDC website observes that the area is close to the #7 train and the Long Island Railroad. That’s true, you can get to it by walking (under elevated infrastructure) the length of about two baseball stadiums.

The EDC site says that there is good highway system access. That is probably a reason the existing car-oriented services and businesses currently thrive there. It is not a good reason to create a dense new urban residential community there. The city is promoting the development as “green” and environmentally oriented; creating a dense new car-reliant community is not.

The EDC site says that the location is “minutes” from the LaGuardia and JFK airports. It is very close to LaGuardia but while it is closer to JFK than some other parts of the city it is not a dependable short trip. Google Maps tells you to plan on 40 minutes if there is traffic. Technically, however, that is still “minutes.”

The EDC site also promotes the site for its connections with Flushing.

An Environmental Reason Debated

It is also being argued that the development should proceed in order to clean up pollution at the site. According to the EDC site:

* Willets Point suffers from widespread petroleum contamination, with additional potential contamination from paints, cleaning solvents, and automotive fluids.

* Environmental hazards are exacerbated by a high water table that spreads pollution throughout the site, endangering adjacent water bodies.
The city continued this theme more accusatorially in public testimony:

Deputy Mayor Robert Lieber and members of the Economic Development Corp. compared the pollution at Willets Point to a state Superfund site in their testimony on Friday, deriding the property owners for years of poor housekeeping while stating their case for a sweeping environmental cleanup of the area.
(See: The Iron Triangle Tracker: Property owners dispute city’s pollution claims after hearing, Posted on October 22, 2008 by Stephen Stirling)

The same Iron Triangle Tracker article covers rebuttals on behalf of the resident businesses:

“No one has ever talked about the Flushing River being contaminated from Willets Point until recently. Flushing River was contaminated for years,” (according to Dan Scully, vice president of Tully Environmental)

* * * *

In a statement, an environmental attorney representing the property owners, Michael Gerrard, said the city is overstating the contamination that exists.

“The only times the government tears down communities because of contamination is when there is a horrible chemical legacy, such as at Love Canal,” Gerrard said. “The key point here is that if Willets Point had that kind of legacy, the city would never want to take title to it because of the liability it would be assuming.”
The businesses in Willets Point pose environmental problems because cars use petroleum products. There may be an extra challenge to a proper environmental handling of things given the limited infrastructure and maybe because the land is so low-lying. One has to wonder, however, whether it will be easier or harder to deal with these businesses in an environmentally friendly and appropriate fashion if they are dispersed over a wide range of locations.

Does Bloomberg Not Know Willets Point Reality?

It is possible that Bloomberg wants to develop by eliminating the existing businesses at Willets Point because he doesn’t actually know what is now there that would be eliminated. Evidence of this is that in a radio interview Bloomberg referred to the Willets Point unknowledgeably as follows:

a haven for "chop shops and deserted warehouses" . . . . "There's no real economic activity there”
(See: The New York Times: Square Feet, A Redevelopment Scuffle in Queens, By Terry Pristin, May 17, 2006.)

“Chop Shop(s)” a Motivating Factor?

The Bloomberg quote mentions “chop shops.” The use of that term may be intentionally disparaging and factor in as an influence for people who want to see the area eliminated. They may believe that area businesses there are illegally carving up stolen cars for car parts. Bolstering this perception is a critically well-received 2007 independent movie, Chop Shop, filmed on location in Willets Point that depicts such illegal activity going on.

The teenage star (12 years old in the film), Alejandro Polanco, actually worked in Willets Point for six months as preparation for the film. He doesn’t agree with the city’s plan for eliminating the district:

"They shouldn't do it," he said, noting that the existing shops might perish if scattered across the city because they rely on a network of customer sharing.

"You're not going to know where to find them," Polanco said. "That's taking business from a lot of people - taking jobs away - just for building big towers for no reason.

"We already got a lot of high-rises in New York."
(See: 'Save Iron Triangle' - 'Chop Shop' star, by Jess Wisloski, April 29, 2008.)

How much illegal activity goes on in Willets Point? Does the rather timely “Chop Shop” reflect a documentary level of truth? It is filmed in a neorealistic style. Not everything about it is realistic. In the film Alejando and his sister take up residence in the area. That would triple the area’s official population since it is supposed to have only one resident.

High Crime or Misdemeanors?

Certainly anyone who has had a car stolen and vandalized will have a strong emotional reaction to the charge that there is a lot of illegal chop shop activity in the area. Before one gets too busy assessing the relative level of crime in a community, it is important to remember that violations of the law come in a variety of flavors and can technically include even jay-walking, together all sorts of other things of various levels of seriousness: chop-shopping stolen cars, undocumented aliens, building code violations and environmental infractions of various degrees. It is hard to imagine that if there is serious illegal activity at Willets Point that the police and inspectors have not zeroed in on it. One would think they would want to resort to a crackdown as an easier instrument than relocation to shut the area down. Also, if there is crime, is the answer to disperse it?

Crime? Out of AKRF’s Environmental Impact Statement’s Mouth

The environmental impact statement for the Willets Point redevlopement plan was prepared by AKRF, Inc., Eng-Wong, Taub & Associates and HDR-LMS. AKRF is notorious for preparing, hired-gun fashion, blight-finding studies and environmental impact statements that congenially support a predetermined pro-development agenda. Their close coordination with those doing development has gotten them involved more then once in legally objectionable conflict-of-interest problems. (See: Friday, August 15, 2008, Was AKRF's work for Ratner a hindrance to hiring by ESDC? No, it was a justification)

We remember that at the September 15, 2008 oral argument for the state lawsuit challenging the Atlantic Yards environmental review hearing, Justice James Catterson expressed judicial skepticism about AKRF and its blight study findings:

“Has AKRF ever studied an area it didn’t find to be blighted?” Catterson asked, drawing muted titters from the audience.
(See: Wednesday, September 17, 2008, In appeal of case challenging AY environmental review, some justices skeptical of state’s blight claim.)

Justice Catterson followed up, explaining his skepticism by saying that he knew a lot about AKRF’s reliable propensity to find blight because he had just written about AKRF and Columbia University. (As referred to above, in both the Columbia University and Atlantic Yards situations AKRF worked for both the private entity and theoretically also for the government, raising all sorts of accountability and conflict-of-interest issues.) (See: Friday, September 19, 2008, Contrivance in the service of creating blight, real blight- Listen again- REAL blight)

one Justice asked ESDC’s attorney whether consultant AKRF has ever studied an area that it didn’t consider blighted. He said he knew a lot about this because he had just written about AKRF and Columbia University. (In both the Columbia University and Atlantic Yards situations AKRF worked for both the private entity and theoretically also for the government, raising all sorts of accountability and conflict of interest issues.)
It is certainly possible to find accounts of crime at Willets Point in the press though sources like the New York Times are not exactly overflowing with them.

Here is the way a description portrays Willets Point crime in the March 30, 2007 environmental impact statement for the Willets Point Development Plan. says:

Today, many automotive repair and service businesses and junkyard operations have continued to add contamination to the area through illegal dumping and poor housekeeping, creating unsafe and unhealthy conditions throughout the District. In 2001 the State Attorney General announced the indictment of 21 junkyards and 35 individuals for violating State environmental laws by dumping motor oil, antifreeze, transmission fluid and other materials onto the ground and into storm drains and Flushing Bay. In addition, some businesses in the area have been linked to organized crime; in the past several years, the New York State Attorney General and the NYPD have issued several indictments for auto theft and racketeering.
It’s true, Elliot Spitzer when Attorney General went after businesses in Willets Point. April 25, 2001 his office issued a press release saying that after a year long investigation those 21 junkyards and 35 individuals, were indicted for breaking state environmental laws by dumping motor oil, antifreeze, transmission fluid and other materials onto the ground and into storm drains as they dismantled cars to be recycled. According to a follow-up press release, one individual was found guilty. Prior to that incident, a 1999 police sting operation reported about in 2000 (Undercover Scrap Operation Leads to Gotti Relative, by Juan Forero, January 26, 2000) resulted in the arrest of Carmine Agnello, the son-in-law of John J. Gotti. Mr. Agnello, owner of a scrap metal shredding company in the Bronx was accused of strong-arm racketeering and extortion tactics to force scrap metal companies in Willets Point to sell scrap to him at below-market prices. The Queens District attorney also asserted that Mr. Agnello ran the Gambino family's auto theft ring.

Most recently, according to the Final Environmental Impact Statement on April 3, 2008, the NYPD seized truckloads of counterfeit sneakers, handbags, and other goods from one of the warehouses.

(Continue to Part II)

1 comments:

joshua said...

I recently came across your blog and have been reading along. I thought I would leave my first comment. I don't know what to say except that I have enjoyed reading. Nice blog. I will keep visiting this blog very often.


Sharon

http://www.autoloans101.info

December 18, 2008 1:13 AM

Will It Come? What the Bloomberg Administration Wills at Willets Point (Part II)


(Continued from Part I)

A Matter of Class; Chop Shops vs. Stadium Builders

There is also the possibility that there is a class thing going on. Bloomberg may be able to see the value of real estate and the city only the way his Wall Street and big developer friends might see it. Perhaps that is why he imagines this busy thriving but lower-class area to be one of “deserted warehouses" where the only activity is illegal.

As stated, Willets Point is right next to the Citifield stadium replacement for Shea Stadium. The Mayor and his Wall Street and developer friends have been active with respect to building and financing stadiums and sports arenas like the new Yankee Stadium and the Nets arena. It is worth remembering that with all the shenanigans engaged in with respect to the development and financing of those sports venues, it is far from clear that the Mayor and his friends have stayed on the legal side of the line. (See: Saturday, November 8, 2008, Does Questionable Assertion of Attorney-client Privilege Point to Yankee Stadium Bond Taxability?)

While an illegal chop shop involves an illegal redistribution of wealth, the sport venue financings involve a far more massive redistribution of wealth from the average tax-paying citizen to the mayor’s wealthy associates (More Money for the Very Rich: An Unsporting Pursuit? March 17, 2008). The picking of the public’s pocket and massive redistribution of wealth that sports venue (stadium and arena) financings represent may technically manage to fall on the proper side of “legal” but that doesn’t make them more acceptable. To the extent that the financing is or might be legal at all it is a problem with the law and tax code loopholes.

Big-Developer Style of Redevelopment

The form that the Bloomberg Administration’s redevelopment of Willets Point is proposed to take involves replacing what is there with a big-developer style of redevelopment. If it succeeds as described with its “high quality” hotel and convention center, it is apparently supposed to surpass rather than resemble the regional community into which it would be implanted. Is it realistic? Whether realistic or not, there has been criticism that the vision pursued will be developer-originated and -driven rather than coming from the community.

One such critic is Brad Lander, executive director of the Pratt Institute Center for Community and Environmental Development, who said the city should have led "a public process, informed by data" before asking developers to submit detailed proposals.
(See again: The New York Times: Square Feet, A Redevelopment Scuffle in Queens, By Terry Pristin, May 17, 2006.)

Seven or Eight Prospective Big Developers

Eight finalist developers submitted plans for Willets Point in March of 2006. (See: The Iron Triangle Begins to Melt, by Matthew Schuerman, March 3, 2006.) The finalist developers at that time were (reciting below with reporter Mr. Schuerman’s characterizations included):

1. Macerich (operates Queens Center mall) with AvalonBay
2. Westfield (former owner of the World Trade Center mall)
3. Vornado Realty Trust (big dog on the porch)
4. TDC Development & Construction (Flushing Commons)
5. Forest City Ratner (of Atlantic Yards fame)
6. Related (another big dog)
7. Partnership of General Growth (new South Street Seaport owners), Rosenheim Associates , LCOR and Massachusetts-based Sage Hotel
8. Muss Development (Flushing Town Center)
We should note that the ordering on this list, which is not alphabetical, is out of an EDC press release. We can’t tell you why the order is what it is, why, for instance, Muss Development is listed last. Reportedly, Vornado did not submit a follow-up bid (Willets Point Plan Challenges Developers, by David Lombino, May 25, 2006).

Only One Developer for an Immense Project? Contrast Battery Park City Model

The City Economic Development Corporation site timeline calendar for the project cryptically states: “Spring 2009: Select developer.”

Why does the site say select developer referring to “developer” in the singular? If Willets Point is 60-62 acres, it is two-thirds the size of Battery Park City which is 92 acres and 9,000 residential units versus the 5,500 units proposed here. Battery Park City was developed by many, many developers. Why would the city award over 60 acres of development to a single company? It evinces an extreme faith in a big development model. It doesn’t make sense. It makes it much more likely that design will be a fluidly changing event driven by a developer rather than being dictated by the public. The majority of decisions will probably be made after the developer has been given a monopoly on the site and the public has lost its negotiating power to control events.

In contrast, the Battery Park City’s model of bidding separate parcels out to the development community at large ensures that the public will get maximum value for the subsidy contributions the public will be making. With a single developer the public will lose the ability to leverage its investment for maximum value when the parcel is developed. The public is also likely to lose control over the schedule of development. More likely that schedule will become what is convenient for the developer which is an undesirable form of additional subsidy in itself. There are already signs that schedule information that has been promulgated is deceptively fictive and the schedule is actually fluid. More on this below.

Municipal Art Society Hearing Testimony on One Developer

The Municipal Art Society shares many concerns with us respecting the Willets Point Development (including using only one developer) which they analyzed at length. Some extracts from their August 13, 2008 comments on the Draft Environmental Impact Statement are as follows:
. . . with respect to the EDC’s proposed ownership model, given the current economic climate doesn’t structuring the plan around a single developer risk long delays at the cost of promised public benefits?

* * * *
The Willets Point Development and Urban Renewal plans have been ill conceived.
o The City should invest in infrastructure and site preparation
o The City should incorporate a multiple-developer model with clear public oversight

* * * *

The Willets Point development plan, which relies on a single developer for site preparation as well as build-out, is a redevelopment model that has not proven to be successful, as demonstrated by the Atlantic Yards and Hudson Yards projects. By eschewing the public sector’s responsibility to prepare the site and provide the public infrastructure necessary for redevelopment, the City is running the risk that the development at Willets Point, as at Atlantic Yards, will stall indefinitely. At the same time, if the City acquires control over the entire site – if necessary through the use of eminent domain – local property owners will have relinquished their stake in the area. This creates the possibility that the site will remain vacant and/or underutilized for years to come.

* * * *
The recent experience at Atlantic Yards serves as a cautionary note to the strategy of developer constructed infrastructure, as their decision making is tied more to capital market fluctuations, compared to the public sector.
If One Developer- Do We suspect. . .

The fact that the city is putting all its development eggs in one basket is an indication that the city probably has an idea of who the developer will be even if it has not yet officially `selected’ the developer. Wouldn’t even the largest developers have to be gearing up already if there were going to take on a project of such scale on their own? The EDC timeline says that site acquisition and relocation is supposed to happen in Spring/Summer 2009 with site preparation, remediation, and construction beginning (right after?) in 2010. Should it be suspected that channels of communication are already open and that the city is hearing information about what the developer thinks will work for them?

Reckoning Acreage: Various Reported Figures

With so much hanging in the balance, it would make sense if much better information about what was going on was publicly available. We’ve noted the wide disparity in the calculation of the number of jobs that will be lost. If you want to calculate how many jobs per acre will be lost the task is even harder because there are different figures for how many acres comprise Willets Point. If you roam around the media, the acreage for the Iron Triangle is variously reported as 55, 60, 61, 62, 64 and 75 acres. Normally the figure is given at around 62 acres, which probably represents a rounding up from a 61.5 acre figure. We suspect that this may somewhat overstate the acreage associated with the Willets Point businesses. There are political advantages and disadvantages to both overstating and understating the business acreage. Stating the acreage low minimizes the eminent domain taking but increases the job/business per acre ratio. On the other hand, stating a high acreage figure could make the scrap metal businesses seem more `dog in the manger’ and as if they are standing in the way of valuable development. It also makes the upzoning seem less significant.

The city asserts surprisingly in one of its Downtown Flushing Development Framework documents that the jobs per acre for the M3-1 zoned Willets Point are low:

Willets Point is zoned M3-1 for heavy manufacturing, a land use designation that is in relatively short supply in the city. . . .Currently, however, the businesses on Willets Point . . . are significantly less productive than those in other M3-1 zones in New York City in terms of employment and value added. For instance, the City estimates that the total jobs per acre on Willets Point is between one-half and one-fifth of the figures for other M3-1 zones.
Obviously, the job ratio, unstated by the document, would depend on the figures assumed for the number of jobs and the for acreage. It is possible to calculate a higher ratio but 1,800 jobs divided by 60 acres would be 30 jobs per acre. A Pratt Study says that in Long Island City in 2000 “overall manufacturing job density is 10.3 jobs per acre.” In EIS documents for the rezoning of the much more prime Greenpoint Williamsburg real estate characterizes contrasting jobs per acre figures: “40.9 jobs per acre versus 6 jobs per acre in the areas slated for residential use.” Nearby to Willets Point, the Bloomberg administration planned to develop the 26 acre site of the former site of Flushing Airport to create 400 permanent jobs (15.4 jobs per acre).

It seems that the variously reported acreage figures for Willets Point can be reconciled this way. Apparently it is possible to calculate that the Willets Point area bounded in by the highways that will be turned over to private developers is a total of about 75 acres. (That’s according to an EDC press release.) Of this, about 45 acres are privately owned, but those acres are mixed in with streets and acreage owned by the MTA. The MTA has about 13.5 acres that it uses for a bus parking and storage. 16 acres are Streets. (The MTA will continue to use land in the area which the Municipal Art Society suggests may pose a concern for the workability of the redevelopment’s urban design.)

Open Space and Parkland?

Battery Park City is about 40% parkland with 36 of its 92 acres being devoted to park space. By comparison, 8 acres of open space are being talked about for the Willets Point development. No matter how it’s calculated that will be a much lesser percentage. While the Willets Point project is nearly surrounded water (Battery park City is actually on the Hudson), the experience on the edges of the project will be of the surrounding highways that intervene. The project is near the large Flushing Meadow Corona Park but it will be a long unpleasant walk past parking lots, a stadium and a train yard to get there.

How Long Will it Take? It Wouldn’t Be 10 Years like They Said Because a Deal for 15 Years . . .

Very recently, contemporaneously with the City Council approval it was reported that “The redevelopment of Willets Point, . . .is expected to be completed in about 10 years.” (See: Council Approves Queens Redevelopment Plans, by Fernanda Santos, November 13, 2008.) It is not clear whether that reported period includes or excludes the time that would precede EDC’s projected 2010 construction start date but perhaps the city conveniently neglected to inform the Times reporter that the 10-year construction period was out-of-date information. In order to negotiate deals with enough Willets Point landowners so as to persuade the City Council to vote for the plan, the city reportedly made deals which entail allowing land owners to remain in place up to 15 years before eminent domain would be used against them. The following is reported in Iron Triangle Tracker about an accord “struck in the morning before the vote”:
The proverbial ax may have fallen on most of Willets Point yesterday, but the three largest businesses in the industrial community were issued a stay of execution — at least for the foreseeable future.

In the 11th hour of negotiations ahead of yesterday’s City Council vote, the city inked a deal that will allow Tully Construction, House of Spices and Fodera Foods to remain at Willets Point for up to 15 years.
(See: Deal with Big Three a win-win: EDC, by Stephen Stirling, November 14, 2008)

City’s Divide-and-Conquer Deal; Three Big Owners Get Upzoning Value

The deal was a divide-and-conquer strategy by the city. It allows three major owners not only to remain in place for a substantial period of time with more control over planning their departure. It also allows them to sell their land for a much higher price. The plan allows these owners, unlike their neighbors, to benefit from the coming upzoning of the land (also per the above article):

Should a situation arise where Tully, Fodera or House of Spices opt not to sell their land, the city would be able to pursue eminent domain after 15 years, though it remains confident this will not be necessary, sources with knowledge of the negotiations said.

The EDC said the businesses will be able to sell their land directly to the developer at a much higher price than they would through negotiations being conducted by the city — chiefly because the rezoning the City Council passed boosts the perceived value of the land to a third party.
A Two-Phase Project and an Admittedly Longer Time Frame

The deal apparently envisions the project proceeding in at least two phases, with an eastern phase where construction would perhaps not begin until at least 15 years out. So much for completion of the project within 10 years!

The EDC said that because the properties all reside on the easternmost portion of the 62-acre site slated for redevelopment, the city will be able to conduct a multi-million dollar environmental remediation and implement much of the infrastructure improvements — such as a sewer system — needed to sustain the planned development.
Negotiating Postures; Transparency Suffers When Information Valuable to Public is Withheld

The process for disclosure of what the public is getting and when the public is getting it is not transparent. As an indication of this the Iron Triangle Tracker article above points out that EDC had previously contended the project could not be phased, a postion apparently taken publicly for the purpose of negotiating. For whatever reason, true and correct information which would have been valuable to the public process was withheld and/or obfuscated. This is keenly relevant since eminent domain is being invoked in the name of the public. The Iron Triangle Tracker:
The agreement represents a step back for the city from its initial assertion that the 62-acre swath of land earmarked for development would need to be cleared and remediated as a whole.
Dividing the Project in Two

Indication that the project could be divided into two phases surfaced this spring, though there were perceived detriments to doing so. (See: Borough President Marshall rips 'crazy' option to split Willets Point plan, by Frank Lombardi and John Lauinger, April 29, 2008)

The mammoth Willets Point redevelopment plan could be divided into two stages under an alternative approach being considered by city officials.

But a key backer of the city's Willets Point vision, Queens Borough President Helen Marshall, denounced the piecemeal option as "crazy." Marshall said she believes the option is aimed at averting the controversial use of eminent domain.

* * *
City Economic Development Corp. officials discussed the option while presenting the Willets Point plan to the City Planning Commission on April 21, kicking off the public review process.

Under the alternative, the heavily polluted 62-acre site would be divided into two segments.

The western portion would be developed first, with land acquisition beginning in 2009, followed by site cleanup and then construction. Once the western portion is finished sometime in 2013, the eastern portion would proceed down the same path, with construction expected to conclude in 2017.


Information About Divided Project Helps to Calculate How Long: Certainly Not 10 Years, the Project Now Looks like it Could Take Over 30

The 15-year holding period negotiated with the three eastern owners would obviously take the commencement of the eastern phase out to 2023, not 2013 as the above seems to suggest (without actually committing to it). Taking this discrepancy as an indicator may point the following: It may take 15 years rather than the projected 3 years (after ESDC’s 2010 web site commencement date) to construct the western phase of the project. The eastern phase is officially projected to take an additional 5 years; if those 5 years were proportionately extended then perhaps the eastern phase of the development should be projected take more than an additional 15 years. That would mean that it is expected that the entire development could take in excess of 30 years. This substantially longer time frame is probably much more consistent with what developers of megadevelopments generally reckon rather than the shorter time frame previously promulgated.

The option of using multiple developers which is being forsworn here would have assured faster overall construction. Battery Park City, 92 acres and 9,000 units has used multiple developers and is only just now nearing completion. It was begun, on a vacant site 28 years ago in 1980.

While the above indicates that we could be dealing with a buildout that could take in itself take over 30 years, the pertinent period could be longer still if there is litigation. Delaying litigation could occur at the outset. With the 15-year hold-off in bringing eminent domain with respect to the eastern parcels a second round of litigation might occur then. The second round of litigation could be the more interesting if in the next generation we see legislatively or judicially implemented eminent domain reform.

A Slower Constructed Two-Phase Project; a Few Problems/Benefits?

If there is a substantial period of time when the project is only half constructed, then the people living in the development will experience the problems experienced on Roosevelt Island when it was a community with too few units (2,141) for there to be good services supporting them.

Here are the other perceived problems discussed in the continuation of the Daily News article above:

But Marshall said it is impractical to develop the site piecemeal, particularly because it would produce the awkward juxtaposition of families living alongside contaminated land cluttered with junkyards and auto-body shops.

"I don't want to subject families to that," she said.

EDC officials did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

But the benefits of a piecemeal approach, as stated in the draft plans, are that it would "allow the city additional time to find suitable relocation sites" and also "spread the cost of property acquisition and infrastructure improvements over time."
Note that the benefits described above do not mention using the divide-and-conquer approach and allowing upzoning benefit value to be pocketed by three eastern owners.

Marshall, however, said she believes the option is aimed at reducing the likelihood that the project - opposed in its current form by 29 City Council members - will require controversial eminent domain land grabs.

"I don't think it's a secret. What they're trying to do is to avoid the anti-eminent domain spirit that is going around the City Council," Marshall said.

Marshall also feared the conference center - much needed by the Queens Chamber of Commerce - would be imperiled under the piecemeal approach.

Compared to the single-phase development model, the piecemeal approach "would not provide the same flexibility in siting" the conference center that the draft plans note, the borough president contended.
The “Flexible” Long-term Project; Where the Public Gets Shortchanged

Reference to “flexibility” in the last paragraph points to the fact that plans for the development are fluid. But it doesn’t make sense to be negotiating with a developer about fluidly changing plans after you have granted a developer a monopoly on 75 acres of development opportunity. Once again we point out that this is the opposite of the very effective Battery Park City exemplar of bidding out building sites over time to multiple developers after the public has determined what it wants. Everyone knows that with respect to building your own home you don’t bid out constructions before you know what you want and expect to change it all through change orders later on.

The idea of completing the project maybe 20 to 30 or 35 years out rather than 10 is quite consistent with the idea that the city envisions accommodating a single developer by letting them proceed with this project entirely on their own time frame. It is a very accommodating posture, essentially like tying a feedbag on a horse. The developer gets to munch at their own pace over an extended period of years. Again, this should be considered a subsidy. The fact that the 15-year deal was recently negotiated probably reflects a realistic recognition that the project is likely to proceed slowly given the current state of the economy.

The current poor economy is likely to mean that the single developer’s bid in 2009 will be a low one. That is especially unfortunate because by not dividing the site up and bidding it out as parcels over time the city is sacrificing its ability capture increasing values in future bids as the area develops. The larger a site and the more protracted its development, the more critical the application of this principle. This criticism has been made of developing the much smaller 26.2 Hudson Yards site and is also applicable to the 22-acre site of the proposed Atlantic Yards.

The more slowly the project proceeds, the more it is likely to change. The more it changes after a developer has been awarded a monopoly the more likely it is that the public will be shortchanged. Figuring out what the redevelopment plan is and whether it makes sense is not that easy from the information that has been made publicly available. It is possible though that the most definite part of the Bloomberg administration’s development plan is the desire to use eminent domain.

How Much Might the Project Change? Some Thoughts on the Convention Center

What sort of changes might occur at Willets Point? The last paragraph of the above quoted article (see the last indent) referred to possibilities with respect to siting the conference center. There has been discussion about expanding the size of the convention center to make it a replacement for the Javits Center. (See: Javits Expansion May Decamp to Queens, By Peter Kiefer, February 25, 2008.)

That may not happen, but even though the project may have changed a great deal in terms of schedule, City Councilman John Liu was previously complaining about the lack of development plan specifics back when this was discussed.

Another critic of the plan has been Councilman John Liu. Mr. Liu is in favor of developing Willets Point but has been critical of how the EDC has communicated the details.

"What was a plan that should have been flushed out more and more as time went on actually has become more of a skeleton," he said.

But Mr. Liu says that with 61 available acres, expanding the proposed size of the convention center would not be a problem. "I think that if the plan is to build a convention center at Willets Points there will be overwhelming if not universal enthusiasm," he said.


(Note, earlier and more recent rendering show a conference center in different locations. The later renderings show the conference center backed against the elevated highway to the northeast, which is probably preferable to putting it next to the creek and wetlands.)

(Continue to Part III)

1 comments:

Cristina said...

I recently came across your blog and have been reading along. I thought I would leave my first comment. I dont know what to say except that I have enjoyed reading. Nice blog. I will keep visiting this blog very often.


Thursday, December 4, 2008

Will It Come? What the Bloomberg Administration Wills at Willets Point (Part III)


(Continued from Part II)

Should a Slow Moving, Poorly Defined Project Still Be a Priority? Yes, Says the Mayor

With the project so poorly defined or flexible and its benefits so slow in coming perhaps Mayor Bloomberg would consider that a period of economic downturn is not a good time to make the wiping out the 250 businesses and thousands of jobs in Willets Point a priority. Not so. It is recently reported that he believes the opposite:

The mayor added that projects like the redevelopment of Willets Point should not be avoided during tough economic times, pointing out that the ambitious undertaking is expected to generate 18,000 construction jobs and more than 5,000 permanent jobs if approved.

“Just because we’re in an economic downturn doesn’t mean we’re going to walk away from our long-term responsibilities,” Bloomberg said. “The city did that in the 70s and it was a near disaster.”
(See: The Iron Triangle Tracker: Monserrate, Katz push for Willets approval, housing deal announced, Tully close, by Stephen Stirling, November 12, 2008)

Battle of the Job Figures: Why the Administration’s Should be Discounted

Of course, future job figures such as those issued when the administration is pushing for projects are untrustworthy. Though most recently the city has said the development will create 5,000 permanent jobs, not too long ago it was asserted that 22% more permanent jobs, 6,100, would be created. (See: Bloomberg Unveils Plan to Redevelop Willets Point, By Anahad O’connor and Terry Pristin, May 1, 2007.) Very likely the 3,000 figure given by the Willets Point Industry and Realty Association as the number of current jobs is high and that the actual number of current jobs is between 1,300 and 1,800, but those jobs, however disputed their count, are bird-in-the-hand. One needs to suspect the 5,000 permanent jobs predicted by the city is still too high and needs to be lowered again. That 5,000 figure also needs to be further discounted because those future jobs that will fully materialize only upon the project’s completion. As reviewed above, the indicators are that the full completion will be a number of years out perhaps as many as 30 or more. With the downturn in the economy, the present value of existing jobs gains comparative weight because the replacement jobs will take longer to materialize.

Obviously, whatever job figures one assumes, job creation figures should net out the number of jobs lost.

Why the Administration May Want to Proceed, at Least to a Point, Despite Economic Downturn

Given that the first steps toward the elimination of the Iron Triangle were undertaken a long time ago, it may understandable if the Mayor thinks that it is important to follow through. A process such as this can take so much time that when begun there is no telling when it can assuredly be completed or at what point in an economic cycle that might fall. Conceivably, the Mayor thinks it was important to get the approval from the City Council while he could. It may be unlikely, but it is possible that he envisions that the approval now obtained will not actually be utilized until the economic climate swings again. There is also the possibility that, having been resisted up to a point, the mayor is now interested in proving that the Iron Triangle can be eliminated for the sake of proving that he is able to do so. Eliminating it may say something about his administration and what it can accomplish where others have failed. Willets Point, after all, is famous for the its past successful survival despite effort of the powerful to put it out of existence.

Willets Point History; Stories of Visits by the Powerful and Wealthy

Depending on whose math you pay attention to, the neighborhood is 65- or 75-years-old, having been settled by some of the businesses now occupying it in the 30s or 40s. The first infrastructure was built in the 30s. The Willets Point area was not paved over when Robert Moses paved over adjoining property for the 1939 Wold’s Fair. The paved property was the ash heap or “valley of ashes” watched over by the eyes of the “Dr. T. J. Eckleburg” billboard in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby. (The triangle includes or abuts the location of George Wilson's gas station where, in Fitzgerald’s book, Myrtle Wilson was run over by Daisy Buchanan. The incident is pivotal for one of the book’s themes, that separated by their wealth, the characters of Tom and Daisy Buchanan are carelessly and insensitively destructive of other people’s lives: “They were careless people, Tom and Daisy–they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made…”)

New York’s next World’s Fair in 1964 with Robert Moses again in charge was on the same site during Mayor Wagner’s administration. Moses wanted to clear the Willets Point land for a parking lot in time for the fair. Successfully resisting Moses is credited with starting the career of a young lawyer named Mario Cuomo. After that, Mayors Koch and Giuliani both tried and failed to pout stadiums on the triangle site. (See: Willets Point, A Development Waterloo? Moses, Wagner, Koch, Giuliani—all have tried to redevelop the scrappy yard next to Shea. Now, it’s Bloomberg’s turn and it’s tough already, by Eliot Brown, February 19, 2008.)


Viewing Willets Point Demolition as Just Another Cost of New Citifield Stadium

Is the new Citifield stadium the reason the Mayor now wants to banish the Willets Point community into history? The Citifield replacement for Shea Stadium is closer to Willets Point than Shea was (by about the distance of a stadium). While we may think that the Willets Point is a perfectly acceptable neighbor for the spanking new stadium, Mayor Bloomberg appears to have other ideas. Willets Point property owners pay city taxes and the stadium owners do not, and yet the construction of the stadium may be bringing about the demise of Willets Point. If so, it will be an extra indirect cost of the stadium. Field of Schemes has used figures from public sources, including Good Jobs New York, NYC Independent Budget Office, and NYC Parks to calculate the total public cost of Citifield stadium as $484.99 million. Perhaps a cost for removing the Willets Point businesses should be added to that total.

It could be that Mayor Bloomberg doesn’t like the aesthetics of “junk yards” car parts or scrap businesses next to a new stadium. In terms of an economic argument, the Mayor has expressed a desire to build retail and entertainment space across from Citifield to lure visitors to the stadium. Years previously, the plan had been to build a “a massive entertainment complex” on top of Willets Point when the new stadium was built. (There are about 80 home games a year.)

Another Example of Bloomberg Administration’s Strange Non-Community Focus When it Comes to Stadiums and Parking Spaces?

It could just be that this is another example of the strangely misplaced focus the Bloomberg administration can have when it comes to stadiums (and their parking lots). Recent news stories mined newly unearthed e-mails concerning the administration’s negotiations concerning Yankee Stadium. They show that in lieu of those things that might be of most concern to the public and local community like restoration of seized parks and saving money, the Bloomberg administration was preoccupied with giving the Yankees an inordinate and undeserved amount of parking so that the administration could procure a theoretically “free” twelve-person luxury suite for its own use (together with “free” food). For more on this see: Mayor’s Focus on City Planning Matters: Some Quantified Analysis, Wednesday, December 3, 2008.


Predicting the Future of Willets Point (All Things Being Equal)

If one were to predict, one would probably say that one day, one way or another, the businesses at Willets Point will probably be replaced by other development representing higher and better uses. All things being equal this would probably naturally come to pass in due time without the use of eminent domain. But, when it comes to eminent domain, all things are not equal. Eminent domain is a tipping of the playing field that makes the unnatural happen. You are putting your faith in planners or government officials to know why the course of events should be taken away from Adam Smith’s guiding invisible hand. It therefore becomes incumbent upon those involved to ask whether eminent domain condemnations make sense given the alternatives or what would more naturally happen without the use of eminent domain. Eminent domain takings are done in the name of the public, so it is incumbent on the public (all of us) to ask these questions.

If eminent domain were not being used, the existing uses in Willets Point would assert their value economically. The existing uses would not be displaced unless other uses could out-compete them. Other uses would not bother to try to out-compete them if they could more economically go elsewhere.

Achieving Highest and Best Use: The Upzoning Alternative of Eminent Domain

For most people, upzoning is what probably first comes to mind as an alternative to eminent domain to stimulate an upgrade of property to a higher and better use. Upzoning without eminent domain allows change to proceed when it makes economic sense for property to change hands or use. It tends to naturally compensate departing businesses in much the same way that the divide- and-conquer deal the city’s EDC negotiated allows the three large individual land owners in the eastern part of Willets Point to benefit from the upzoned value when they sell their land. With upzoning, individual parcels would change hands or use in the sequence that made sense; the first parcels to upgrade being the ones where there was the greatest profit to be made. The speed with which a changeover would happen would depend on the economic climate, but land would not be likely to lie fallow because a change of use was artificially forced before the time was ripe. Change would be less controlled: If the economics were more attractive in Downtown Flushing or on land where businesses did not need to be displaced, change might occur there first instead of at Willets Point. Therefore, we might see the development there spearheaded by the local Chinese and Korean developers who are currently so active, rather than by through “big- developer” style development by the larger firms.



Upgrade of Infrastructure and Services if You Want Highest and Best Use: Lawsuit on the Subject

Another way to encourage a higher and better use of property is to upgrade the services and infrastructure in the area. The current situation at Willets Point is essentially the opposite. The city now provides minimal services to Willets Point. The area lacks sewers. There are no sidewalks. It has been so long since roads were paved that to say the area is spectacularly potholed would be a severe understatement. The potholes are lakebeds. The owners there have brought a lawsuit claiming that the level of services is discriminatorily low. The Daily News summarizes the allegation of neglect in the suit as follows:

The suit says the city has withheld services such as trash and snow removal and police surveillance; refused to maintain drainage, roadways and sanitary sewerage lines, and allowed curbs, gutters and fire hydrants to deteriorate beyond repair.

(See: Willets Point property owners sue city, by Jess Wisloski, April 10, 2008.)



Withholding services can be a strategy to, among other things, foster blight and pay a low price for land upon condemnation.

The Having-it-All-Plus-More Alternative to Today’s Proposed Willets Point Destruction

There is a way of having all the benefits of the Willets Point redevelopment plan plus more. There are alternative areas to build, even in the immediate vicinity of Willets Point. The parking lot for the new Citifield stadium involves an expanse almost as large as the Willets Point triangle. The world is quite familiar with ways that parking can be incorporated in other city structures. Building could begin in the areas immediately next to the subway and train station stops. In addition, also immediately next to the subway and train station stop there are rail yards that could be built over. There are obviously other areas in the city where our current priority is to build over train yards, Hudson Yards and Atlantic Yards providing examples.


Multiple Advantages

There would be significant advantages to building in these alternative areas, in addition to the fact that it would not involve the elimination of the existing private-sector-created Willets Point jobs and businesses. Initially, these areas would have a clearly defined and unique marketing appeal that would be comfortably consistent with developing the area at whatever speed unfolding economic conditions turn out to dictate. The buildings would attract people who wanted the pronounced convenience of being close to the subway. (The #7 train is actually one of the few subway lines whose capacity is recognized to be currently underutilized.) They would also be right next to Flushing Corona Park which apartments in the complex would overlook.

The problem of living in an emerging neighborhood not yet large enough to sustain supporting services would be greatly obviated by the immediate proximity to mass transit, which for commuters would make the neighborhood a near equivalent to an extension of the city they were commuting from. It would also mean that people moving in would be as little as one stop away from other neighborhoods like Downtown Flushing.

Rather than being hemmed in by problematic infrastructure like highways, the new development complex would make a substantial amount of problem infrastructure go away by building over it.

The retail that is supposed to be built to attract stadium patrons wouldn’t have to try to lure them in an unfamiliar direction away from the subways: It could instead present itself to patrons as they were walking to and from the subways and trains.

The housing could, and probably would, have all the same affordability components now talked about as being part of the administration’s Willets Point redevelopment plan. It might even be possible to do more affordable units. Buildings in this area are far enough west that they are not in the LaGuardia flight path; they could be built taller and, if otherwise appropriate, there could be greater density in this park side area.

Preparation of a Site and Proceeding in Parcels

The first phases of development could proceed immediately, far faster than the current Willets Point plan, because the impediments of an existing population, litigation included, would be avoided. In all likelihood, site preparation would be easier.

There would be site preparation costs, particularly for building over the rail yards, but there are also site preparation costs associated with building in the Willets Point triangle area. In the case of building over the parking lots and train yards, all of site preparation costs would constitute positive addictions to the city’s social capital whereas the cost of removing Willets Point businesses involves a partial subtraction of social capital. Rather than being out of pocket on the transaction, the city and the MTA might actually make money when the property to be built upon is put out to bid.

The development could be built in multiple chunks bid out over time to multiple developers following the model used in Battery Park City. Unlike building in the Iron Triangle, it would be relatively easy to phase development here.


Escalating Jobs

Presumably, development would grow out from the public transportation stops. It would grow out toward the Willets Point triangle. Jobs it created would be in addition to rather than sacrificing the private-sector-created Willets Point jobs. If the city’s figures are not inflated, when construction in the alternative area is half complete in perhaps 10 or 15 years, there would be 2,500 permanent jobs associated with the new development plus the 2,000 or so jobs at Willets Point would exist alongside those jobs. There is every reason to suspect that there would be more and better jobs in the Iron Triangle by that time.

By the time the development was all built out and reached the borders of Willets Point, there would be 7,000 or more jobs, a net increase of 5,000 or so versus the only 3,000 net increase in jobs in the area under the city’s current plan.

Probable Eventual Changeover for the Triangle

One would still expect that Willets Point would change. It is still predictable that the area will eventually graduate to higher and better uses. Some change might come gradually over time, but the complete changeover in uses might not happen until much later. Changes would happen through the private sector rather than being dependent upon subsidy. Presumably Willets Point development would respond, over time, to upzoning and an upgrade in services and infrastructure.

In time one might still predict a complete changeover in use that would probably come when the new development reached the borders of the triangle. But by the time the new development reached those borders the situation would be different. When the borders of the newly developed neighborhood reached and began to blend into the area of the Iron Triangle, be it 15, 20, 30 or 35 years out, the new complex spreading out from the transit stops would be a full-fledged neighborhood. Erecting residential buildings in the triangle thereafter would not involve the risky building of an isolated outpost. Anything built there at this later point would immediately have the services available because of the complex that had already been built, a neighborhood that the triangle could then become a part of.

Building in this alternative fashion would mean there would be no chance of the city being saddled with an unwanted mistake created by a public-sector, private-sector partnership. When ill-considered partnerships fail, the public faces clamorous lobbying for remedial corrections in the form of after-the-fact piling on of additional public subsidies.

We could be wrong about an eventual changeover of Willets Point from industrial use. Admittedly, there is a certain amount of crystal ball work involved in looking so far out into the future. The Municipal Art Society has submitted that:

Given its adjacency to other industrial sites, its relative proximity to the College Point industrial park, and its accessibility to major transportation routes as well as the airport, the site may be more appropriate for strategic investment in industrial uses.
MAS also suggested that the site has another rare characteristic making it a good candidate for continued industrial use; the site could be easily accessed by barge; such water transportation is especially energy-efficient. The advantage of proceeding in the fashion we are advocating is that the future need not be irrevocably dictated until future economic conditions have begun to better assert themselves.

A Win-Win? For Whom Could this Be Bad?

It seems like a win-win proposal that makes sense for the city. Shouldn’t the City Council, if it exercised leadership, be leading the city in this direction?

If this is not the direction in which the city is headed, one should ask why. For whom would such a proposal not be good? For whom is the Bloomberg administration’s proposal better?

The Bloomberg proposal is better for the one big developer that would get to have monopolistic sway over a multi-decade development project. The Bloomberg single big-developer proposal stands to be good for that single big developer for all the reasons such a proposal stands to be bad for the public.

Among other things, the alternative of building on the parking lots or over the train yards would mean that bidding developers would have to bid maximum value for the land to be built upon. The use of eminent domain to acquire land in the triangle pushes down the amount that developers might have to pay. According to one city document (the implementation strategy), the price would not be bad given the number of acres involved: “The total site acquisition estimate is $131.5 million.” According to the Municipal Art Society’s August testimony, “The city has already set aside close to 389 million dollars to support the redevelopment of Willets Point; and as part of this plan the city will be using public monies to either buy out the owners or to pay fair market value via eminent domain.” The problem that MAS points out is that since so much of the investment is public money for which the city, not the developer, is at risk, the private sector’s incentive to proceed on schedule is drastically minimized.

It is possible to speculate that the single developer chosen might be Muss. It is possible that Muss Development might prefer that the city develop the Willets Point triangle area first over other areas because it is closer to the development they have already begun on the other side of Flushing Creek. Arguably, it might have a potentially greater synergistic effect. (For more on the perspective of Muss see the next section.)

Returning for a moment to the recent Yankee Stadium stories and what we noted about the Bloomberg administration’s misplaced focus when it comes to stadiums and their parking; it is quite possible that the administration can be somewhat oblivious to community goals when it focuses on delivering a substantial quantity of parking to meet the demands of stadium owners.

Some Relevant Perspective on the Alternatives

The subject of the Willets Point redevelopment came up just recently in a December 2, 2008 panel discussion, On the Waterfront: Finding the Balance for Development and Communities, sponsored by the Center for New York City Affairs and Milano The New School for Management and Urban Policy.

New York Needs Industrial Waterfront: Rethink Willets Point

Carl Biers, Education Director for International Longshoremen’s Association Local 1588, noted that some of the available wisdom being offered asserts the that the current national economic crisis has some of it roots in policies that subsidize housing and residential real estate at the expense of the “productive” sectors of the economy. Not disputing this, the panel discussed with general agreement the related theme that a balance is needed between industrial and other uses of the waterfront such as housing and recreation. Joshua Muss, President, Muss Development Company, which, as noted, is developing the project on the other side of the Flushing River and is a candidate developer for Willets Point, said that as a New York City housing developer he might prefer that all the New York harbor’s industrial uses be in New Jersey, but that he realized that couldn’t be the case and that some of the New York waterfront needed to be industrial.

When the panelists were asked for specific suggestions for what should be done differently on the waterfront Mr. Biers said he thought the Willets Point redevelopment should be rethought.

Relevant Thoughts from a Relevant Developer, Muss

Mr. Muss offered a number of other thoughts during the course of the evening that we found relevant to the Willets Point redevelopment. Early on he was asked about the effect of the financial crisis on ambitious waterfront development. “Ambitious has a way of being redefined,” he said. He said that the downturn in the economic cycle would have an effect on overall development, but that the effect would be more pronounced for waterfront development in part because environmental factors and things like ground water level and water tables came into play as well as the fact that properties were zoned for industrial use. He said that no developers were going to be putting projects into the ground in the near future. He said this was true unless they “had all the money in the world” because financing was not available. He said that developers would not be proceeding because they “are not dumb.” He pointed out, however, that development takes a very long time: 3 - 10 - 25 - 33 years and that this was a good time to “seek approvals.” He explained it was a good time to get the government officials’ attention. He said it was also a good time to take a “slow look” at development “without actually building.” He noted that the project on the Flushing River had taken him 28 years to get to it current point and that he had been working on another project for 33 years.

Mr. Muss also offered the following observation relative to convention centers. He said that 25 years ago he had worked up a plan that proposed to put a convention center in Sunnyside Yards in Queens “rather than at the edge of the city.” Earlier we noted the consideration that had been given to moving the Javits Center convention center in toto to Willets Point. From time to time consideration has been given to moving the Javits Center to the Sunnyside Yards location. If Javits is torn down, its Hudson River waterfront can be put to a higher and better use. Manhattan (See: Expansion of Javits Center May Shrink to a Renovation, by Charles V. Bagli, December 10, 2007.) While the suggestion of moving Javits to Sunnyside is not currently in fashion, such a new location would be about the same distance from LaGuardia as Willets Point. The location is also probably a more central-city location, while Willets Point is more “at the edge of the city.” Sunnyside is, however, father away from Kennedy International Airport.

From Mr. Muss’s remarks you might assume that he would agree with Mr. Biers that the Willets Point redevelopment should be rethought. Not so. Before the evening was out he gave his opinion, saying he thinks “Willets Point is so warranted” and observing that it could not have been done without government involvement.

EDC Official, Lannon: the City Needs Time If Wants To Avoid Making Mistakes

Whose perspective, Mr. Biers or Mr. Muss’s, should win the day? Should Willets Point be rethought? Another member of the panel, Venetia Lannon, a Senior V.P., Maritime Division, NYC Economic Development Corporation, offered some general guidance that could easily apply. Ms. Lannon said that the good news about development slowing was that there was an opportunity to “reexamine where we are.” She stated that there are problems when things are rushed, when there are questions about what the right answer is. In this regard she cited the IKEA built on the shores of Brooklyn. We previously wrote about the IKEA mistake to which Ms. Lannon was almost certainly referring:

Industrial Assets Decommissioned and Carelessly Sacrificed

We don’t want to sidetrack into the question of whether so much land associated with the industrial sector of the city’s economy should have been decommissioned. Certainly it was important to make a shift, but it is important to do these things intelligently and not reflexively. The elimination of a sorely needed graving dock (dry dock) in Red Hook to create an IKEA parking lot was a mistake. It eliminated high-paying jobs while replacing them with a similar number of much lower-paying jobs. If it was essential to have IKEA (with its parking lot), we could have had both IKEA and the graving dock. The city is now looking at spending a billion dollars to replace the sacrificed dry dock.
(For this and links to the background articles see: Saturday, October 25, 2008, More Discredit of Bloomberg as Qualified Financial Crisis Leader)

Several times when Ms. Lennon was speaking about setting a proper balance in waterfront usage, she was feistily interrupted the moderator, Greg David, Editorial Director, of Crain’s New York Business who told her with debatable jocularity that he did not think she was properly representing the Bloomberg administration’s point of view.

(Continue to Part IV)


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回复 rubin 2010-8-15 21:07
参考美国中文电视记者陈少风报道:
法拉盛威利点开发交通存漏洞 多开发案汇聚道路超负荷
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