QNS
Astoria residents and activists made their opposition to Innovation QNS loud and clear Wednesday night outside the Museum of the Moving Image where developers held a town hall
presenting the project, which would add a set of 12 luxury high-rise
buildings centered on five blocks around the intersection of Steinway
Street and 35th Avenue.
The $2 billion project, which is led by Kaufman Astoria Studios,
Silverstein Properties and BedRock Real Estate Partners, is touted by
developers as a benefit to the community, adding 711 affordable
apartments and “much-needed” open space. However, residents are
convinced Innovation QNS will raise the cost of living, completely
changing the economic and cultural make-up of their neighborhood.
Innovation QNS will reserve about 25 percent of its residential spaces for
affordable housing, which would leave 2,120 units priced at the market
rate: ranging from $2,000-$3,000 a month for a studio to $4,000 for a
two-bedroom.
Innovation QNS consists of 12 buildings, with eight standing at over 15 floors and the two largest at 27 floors.
About 60 residents passionately chanted “Innovation QNS is
gentrification QNS,” outside of the town hall where developers presented
the project inside. The protesters, many of whom were immigrants, said
that these luxury buildings will inevitably drive up rents in the
surrounding area, forcing long-time residents to move — as seen
previously in gentrified neighborhoods like Long Island City and
Williamsburg in Brooklyn.
Hazra Rahman, a two-decades-long resident of Queensbridge Houses, said that this project would displace her and her husband.
“Astoria has been a landing place for working-class Bengali people
and we have a right to stay,” Rahman said. “Our family should be able to
live and thrive in Astoria, but they are being pushed farther and
farther away. There are no deeply affordable apartments for us. Our
beloved small businesses are going to get priced out too.”
Bishop Mitchell Taylor, a partner with Innovation QNS and CEO of
Urban Upbound, stated that instead of these luxury buildings driving up
the cost of living in the area, it will lower rents in Astoria — which
angry protesters called out as a lie.
“To create 700 affordable units, then to create an additional supply
that will drive prices of existing [housing] stock down, I think creates
a tremendous opportunity for us, especially Black and brown communities
that have historically been left out of this part of Astoria,” Taylor
said.
As protesters made their way inside the Museum of the Moving Image to
join the town hall, they had a chance to directly confront developers
during the public comment portion of the meeting.
Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani stood alongside disgruntled residents and directly responded to Taylor’s comments.
“Bishop Taylor, you had been talking about the impact of what those
25 percent of affordable units would do — that they would drive down the
rents in the surrounding area — I have a different analysis about the
75 percent of market-rate units where they drive up rents,” Mamdani
said.
Other residents echoed these concerns during the town hall.
Mamdani said that Astoria is in the midst of a massive displacement
problem and Innovation QNS’ plan to add 711 affordable apartments
masquerades the detriment to the community.
“What we’re looking at is only going to accelerate the displacement
faced by so many of my constituents,” Mamdani said. “If you have more
than 2,000 market-rate apartments coming up here, we will see more and
more landlords looking at those units as the new going rate for living
in Astoria.”
Fuel Grannie
Oof, I knew exactly what we were in for the minute I saw Mitchie Taylor seated on the stage.
The presence of Urban Upbound’s notorious CEO at yesterday’s barely-advertised InnovationsQNS town hall could only mean one thing: this project is a scam and Big Sleazy is likely being compensated to promote said scam, as he had been with both Amazon HQ2LIC and YourLIC.
Mitchell Taylor,
who owns a $2million home on Long Island, brings that sell out energy
as he claims to represent the entire Queensbridge population while his history reflects an exploitation of that community for his own profit.
There’s also his repeated history of sexually harassing women.
And during the summer of 2020, as covid raged and people sought outdoor refuge, Taylor’s nonprofit security company infamously and conveniently profited when Gantry Plaza State Park, a public park, was used by the, ah, public while the wealthy inhabitants
of the waterfront luxury towers whined and railed about too many
unwelcomed humans visible from their lofty, shiny, windowed perches.
At yesterday’s town hall, as Taylor detailed a planned “community center” to “house neighborhood nonprofits” within the 27-story towers of InnovationQNS,
I could not help but wonder that the only nonprofits which might end up
using that space will be those umbrellaed under Taylor’s highly
profitable Urban Upbound.