THE WEST SIDE’S COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER SERVING CHELSEA, HUDSON YARDS & HELL'S KITCHEN
Warming Up to the Zoo
Hopper-Gibbons Supporters Prevail in Court BY ZACH WILLIAMS Preservationists scored a long-sought legal victory in an ongoing effort to restore Manhattan’s only documented and landmarked stop on the Underground Railroad back to its original height. The appellate division of New York Supreme Court ruled on Feb. 24 that Tony Mamounas, owner of the HopperGibbons House (339 W. 29th St.) would need approval from the city Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) in order to finish a fifth story. An attorney for a local group seeking to remove the buildContinued on page 3
Modified Pier55 Gets Park Trust Green Light BY ALBERT AMATEAU The Hudson River Park Trust’s board of directors has approved the $130 million Pier55 project funded by Barry Diller and Diane von Furstenberg. The innovative new pier, to be located between the pile field of the historic old Pier 54, where the survivors of the Titanic landed, and the Pier 56 pile field, will still need approval from the Army Corps of Engineers and the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation before construction can begin in May 2016. Continued on page 2
Canine Communication See page 11.
Photographer Jenny Rubin captured these images of deeply embedded winter and impending spring, during a trip to the Central Park Zoo (64th St. & Fifth Ave.) last week. “It’s an inexpensive, great getaway right in the city!” said Rubin, who noted that the cold weather kept crowds away and afforded her some quality face time with the animals. Visit centralparkzoo.com for more info.
Progress Report: Affordable Housing BY EILEEN STUKANE The outlook for affordable housing in New York City can seem good or bad depending on your perspective, but there’s no denying that a lot of energy is being devoted to the cause. Just this week, Eric Bederman, spokesperson for NYC’s Department of Housing, Preservation and Development (HPD) reported to Chelsea Now: “We have a target to finance 16,000 affordable units in Fiscal Year 2015, and we’re currently on pace to exceed that goal.” Closer to home, NYC’s Department of Economic Development Corporation (EDC) and HPD have already begun meeting with the Chelsea and Hell’s Kitchen community in relation to the development of one of the sites suggested in the Community Board 4 (CB4) Affordable Housing Plan — a call for 11,000 affordable apartments.
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Initially drafted in June 2014, the CB4 Affordable Housing Plan has grown from its original 60 pages to 81. It has yet to be rubber-stamped by the board, but that hasn’t stopped elected officials and city agencies from noticing the sites on city-owned land that would be the most economically feasible for development. This month brought Mayor de Blasio’s State of the City address, with his commitment to the construction of 80,000 new units of affordable housing by 2024 — which as he says, “means building new affordable units at twice the average annual rate of the past 25 years.” The implementation of suggestions in the CB4 Plan by city agencies dovetails with the de Blasio administra-
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VOLUME 07, ISSUE 07 | FEBRUARY 26 - MARCH 11, 2015