Monday, July 26, 2021

de Blasio's D.O.B. enables illegal demolition of house

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 THE CITY

 Before the first fireworks launched on the Fourth of July, booms and bangs were already reverberating around a residential block near Prospect Park.

That morning, despite a city order halting construction work, a small demolition crew revved up a backhoe and began ripping apart what had once been a three-story house at 1935 Bedford Ave. in Prospect Lefferts Gardens, alarming local residents.

“Everyone heard a huge crash,” said Cal Hadley, who lives adjacent to the property on Fenimore Street. “We all looked out the window, thought there was an explosion.”

For years, Hadley and a group of concerned neighbors have complained to city agencies and local politicians about what they asserted were unauthorized demolition, unsafe conditions and trash dumping at the site and a property next door at 1931 Bedford Ave.

The city Department of Environmental Protection found asbestos at the site in 2018 — and last year fined the owner more than $68,000 for multiple violations of asbestos-removal safety rules. While DEP certified the site asbestos-free as of this March, locals, especially many who live in a neighboring co-op and on Fenimore Street, fear they’re inhaling toxic particles kicked up by demolition. 

Bedford Holdings JV, LLC, an entity associated with developer Gabriel Sakaff, purchased the side-by-side lots on the Bedford Avenue block in 2017. Where two homes once stood, only half of one remained until Wednesday, its backside gutted and debris strewn across the lots.

Sakaff intends to build a seven-story residential building with at least 39 apartments and a community facility, city records show. THE CITY could not reach Sakaff at any of the phone numbers or emails provided on applications his firm submitted to the city Department of Buildings.

 ince work on the property began years ago, residents of the neighboring co-op in the fast-gentrifying neighborhood have complained about debris blowing into their homes. “I can’t get fresh air because I have to keep my window closed,” Olga Baly-Noel, who’s lived in the co-op for more than 20 years, recently told THE CITY.

During the clamor on July 4, residents called 911. Several agencies, including the NYPD, FDNY and DOB’s emergency response team, arrived and forced demolition to stop. DOB officials issued a $12,500 fine to Bedford Holdings for violating city orders.

After city officials left, a man neighbors identified as Sakaff began “raving up and down the sidewalk” and shouting obscenities, said Leif McIlwaine, a co-op resident. A neighbor, James Parks, recorded a video showing a confrontation between the man and McIlwaine. In another, the man blows a kiss into the camera before storming off down the street. THE CITY reviewed the footage.

The demolition crew returned the next day to tear down the home. Residents confronted and filmed the workers, who left before the authorities arrived. The DOB issued several more fines to the property owner on July 6, city records show.

On the night of July 14, a worker used a hacksaw to remove a lock that FDNY placed on a fence surrounding the property, according to local residents who filmed the incident and called the police. That heightened local concerns about demolition work.

A DOB spokesperson initially told THE CITY that demolition work couldn’t proceed until the owner obtained proper permits, contractors produced an engineering report on the site’s conditions and remedied unsafe conditions, and the DOB inspected the site.

Now, city officials are reversing course on their stop-work order

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

This happens all the time. At least the DOB showed up. When making 311 complaints - the operators take down the wrong information and inspectors come 2 months later. No violations are issued. Even if violations are issued the companies and landlords pay nothing. There should be full shut downs - things should be fixed and then work should start again. No one really cares about neighborhoods anymore. Let me tell you - here in Queens the city allows 3 construction site on one dead end street, removed the STOP sign at the corner and allows weekend construction. Residents can't get a break.

Anonymous said...

entity associated with developer Gabriel Sakaff

Lolz! Whatever gets built here will surely be on the "worst landlords" list in years to come. Where do all these Big Hats come from being able to buy up billions in total small real-estate holdings?

Anonymous said...

Russia must have hacked the DOB 311 complaints.

Anonymous said...

Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams will be “de Blasio 2.0” !

Anonymous said...

https://newyorkyimby.com/2018/01/rendering-revealed-permits-filed-for-1935-bedford-avenue-prospect-lefferts-gardens-brookl.html

Anonymous said...

Looks like the city even did the demolition for them citing safety reasons.

http://a810-bisweb.nyc.gov/bisweb/WorkPermitDataServlet?requestid=4&allisn=0003856523&allbin=3115549

http://a810-bisweb.nyc.gov/bisweb/OverviewForComplaintServlet?requestid=2&vlcompdetlkey=0002715253 All work permitted under IED ...

Anonymous said...

It’s the free market economy in action.

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