The City Council voted Thursday to rezone a 166-acre swath of Edgemere,
approving a plan first proposed by the de Blasio administration that
could add more than 1,200 new housing units and improve resiliency in a
Queens neighborhood at severe risk of flooding.
The land use
plan, part of a broader initiative known as Resilient Edgemere,
encompasses the area bound by Beach 35th Street and Beach 50th Street
and will change zoning rules to increase density in some areas, limit
development in others and raise the shoreline along Jamaica Bay.
Resilient Edgemere also includes efforts to develop housing on
city-owned parcels, elevate homes, improve parks and infrastructure and
designate 16 acres as open space to be used for coastal protection.
The
Council specifically approved five applications submitted by the city’s
Department of Housing and Preservation and Development (HPD) to amend
the zoning and allow for new development with mandatory inclusionary
housing (MIH) affordability rules, which force developers to cap rents
on a portion of their units for low- and middle-income New Yorkers.
Around 530 new units will be affordable under MIH, according to HPD, and
35 percent of those affordable units will be up for sale, not rent. The
plan would further a Community Land Trust on up to eight acres of city-owned land.
Resilient
Edgemere establishes two special coastal risk districts, which HPD
defines as “currently at exceptional risk from flooding and may face
greater risk in the future.”
Councilmember Selvena Brooks-Powers,
who represents Edgemere and other neighborhoods in the eastern portion
of the Rockaway Peninsula, said the changes will allow for more
affordable homes in the waterfront neighborhood, while shoring up the
region against rising sea levels and storm-related flooding.
“Edgemere
will benefit from vital affordable homeownership opportunities,
infrastructure investments and protection from a changing climate,”
Brooks-Powers said. “Rockaway has seen a surge of new development in
recent years, but that development has not been accompanied by a
commensurate investment in local infrastructure.”
Brooks-Powers
inherited the project from her predecessor, Donovan Richards, who was
elected Queens borough president in 2020 and told City Limits he was
pleased that the Council voted to approve the rezoning after seven years
of planning and community engagement. Richards recommended the plan in
his advisory role in March but urged the city to foster affordable home
ownership opportunities in response to community demands.
“There
is tremendous promise in the Resilient Edgemere Community Plan,”
Richards said, adding that he would focus on ensuring that developers
and the city adhere to local hiring and MWBE commitments.
Under
the changes, which now await Mayor Eric Adams’ signature, most of the
area north of Beach Channel Drive would be zoned for one- and two-family
homes, while the stretch between Rockaway Beach Boulevard and Edgemere
Avenue would allow for taller, mixed-used buildings. City-owned vacant
land next to the Edgemere Houses would be converted to open space, as
would much of the land abutting the Jamaica Bay.
In a statement
following the vote, Adams hailed the plan as “an important step forward
for residents of Edgemere, the Rockaways, and the entire city.”
9 comments:
" Repeat the Line " This will fail with floods and crime.
Is this part of the New Green Scam ?
“The best Build Back Better Plan Ever” LOL...
Build baby build
Another nail in the coffin for Rockaway. Going to Mott Avenue/Far Rockaway is unpredictable. Yesterday a mother pushing a stroller and a man were both shot, the gun man was in an SUV. Do you think he bothered to license his gun?
People with small dogs do not walk them out side, because their dogs are robbed at gunpoint and sold on Craigs List.
Far Rockway is a dangerous ghetto. No matter how much money you flush into it, just like with Jamaica, it will remain a ghetto. The NYCHA buildings are commandeered by drug dealer convicted felons, gang bangers.
Doe anyone besides me think building property in a flood zone is a bad idea? Hurricane Sandy was bad enough, the neighbors from the NYCHA buildings looted, robbed and terrorized Rockaway in the days afterwards. Then they were the first ones on the donations lines with their hands out. They knew when goods and gift cards were coming into Rockaway. One woman ran a supposedly free flea market but was really stealing gift cards, a tractor trailer of Brand New Nike sneakers that was supposed to go any one who needed them and endless brand new appliances that she and her mother blatantly stole. She sold the donated appliances, stoves, refrigerators, etc. Wonderful place, right? I guess she learned from the Community Board members and elected officials on how to graft. Thanks for destroying Rockaway.
NYC is a dysfunctional government.
Polls indicate that America’s working class of all races are fed up with Democratic leadership that just doesn’t care about average Sheeple's needs.
People still insist on building on barrier islands, and then wonder when a hurricane floods the place. At least they have the "Global warming" boogieman to blame.
PS - Sea levels aren't rising. It's just another lie.
@NPC
Yep. They have Greta Dumberg, the high school nutjob directing climate guilt.
Straight out of the Rockefeller and Rotschild playbook.
The "overdevelopment" they're planning looks straight out of a suburb. Any development is overdevelopment to you, Crappy.
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