Competing Pride Marches in 2019? 06
No Excuse Not to Vote 10
Legal Pot Moves on Two Fronts 14
RENEWED PUSH TO FOCUS ON NEW CONSTRUCTION’S SHADOWS Photo by Sydney Pereira
The foundation for the 800-foot tower that Gamma Real Estate plans to build at 430 E. 58th St.
In E. 58th St. Tower Fight, Debate Over Who’s Ahead BY SYDNEY PEREIRA An Upper East Side community group is claiming a small victory in its legal battle against a tower under construction on E. 58th St. But that victory, the developer counters, is nothing more than a mere coincidence due to the project’s construction timeline. The East River Fifties Alliance (ERFA) — which has battled against Gamma Real Estate’s proposed 64-story tower since 2015 — is elated the developer’s attorneys have acknowledged in court that planned construction would not violate the neighborhood’s 2017 rezoning until well into 2019. Opponents of the project at 430 E. 58th St. are voicing confidence that timeline will allow them the breathing room to legally block the tower from rising to 800 feet. City Councilmember Ben Kallos, a project opponent, argues the developer’s court filing suggests it is aware that opponents have the stronger legal argument. Gamma Real Estate proceeding with a “toweron-a-base” approach to the project that complies with the recent rezoning, he said, is a clear indication the developer doesn’t want to take any chances that the New York State Supreme Court will rule against the tower’s height. “Developers who build as-of-right don’t hedge their bets,” said Kallos, adding, “Even they know we will likely win.” The legal clash playing out in court hinges on TOWER FIGHT continued on p. 5
November 1 — 14, 2018 | Vol. 04 No. 22
Photo by Sydney Pereira
Supertall buildings sprouting up on the south side of Central Park.
BY SYDNEY PEREIRA Upper West Side City Councilmember Mark Levine is betting that his proposal for a task force to study the impact of building shadows will win support on his second try, three years after the measure languished in the Council. The bill — which Levine reintroduced two weeks ago — would create a task force to study the impact that new building construction would have on public parks. That task force would issue a report with recommendations for addressing possible shadow impacts on park spaces and the kind of development that should be permitted. “We understand that we need to continue building in the city, but we can do it in a way that accounts for sunlight,” Levine said. “My point in putting forward this bill is that protection of our green spaces has been totally left out of how the city has planned the built environment.” Levine’s Upper West Side colleague Helen Rosenthal and the Upper East Side’s Ben Kallos, both fighting tall buildings in their own districts, have also signed on. Speaker Corey Johnson’s spokesperson Breeana
Mulligan said only that Johnson “will monitor the bill” through the legislative process. The mayor’s office did not respond to a request for comment. The legislation was inspired by a growing concern in Midtown and on the Upper East and West Sides about how new “supertalls” are impacting Central Park, especially at its south end — including Extell’s 1,000-foot building, One57, at 157 W. 57th St. and Seventh Ave., completed in 2014, CIM Group’s 1,400-foot tower at 432 Park Ave. and E. 57th St., completed in 2015, and JDS Development Group’s Steinway Tower at 111 West 57th St., currently under construction and expected to rise to more than 1,400 feet. “We need to urgently equip ourselves with better zoning tools,” Layla Law-Gisiko, the chair of Community Board 5’s Central Park Sunshine Task Force, said in a written statement. “A task force will help identify the best mitigating solutions to protect parks from shadow encroachment.” In 2013, the Central Park Conservancy told Politico SHADOWS continued on p. 24
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