Friday, April 22, 2011

Zoning code has stifled development?

From The Real Deal:

The Department of City Planning will hold a conference this fall in hopes of finding a way to simplify the 1,500-page zoning resolution, whose current complexity apparently stifles developers and architects. According to the Wall Street Journal, urban planners find the current document so confusing that they're discouraged from development, and a recent court ruling forced the city to rewrite hundreds of sections because of the imprecise meanings of the words "development" and "building."

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

You have to be fully retarted to think that people are "discouraged" from development in this city.

There is so much crap being built and overdevelopment of neighborhoods that I actually wish the city would discourage development for a while.

Anonymous said...

A moratorium would be a great idea until the city has caught up with upgrading its infrastructure to keep pace with its current state of over development!

LTIS (laughingg'til I shit)...
I'll put that thought under my pillow tonight and hope that the tooth fairy will grant me that wish.

Anonymous said...

That real estate is being discouraged is of course a big joke.

The real issue here is the on going inability of the media to cover the real estate topic professionally defined as giving a balanced factual picture.

Anonymous said...

a d.o.b.insider told me he can not buck the developers and real estate industry in n.y.c..

his pension is the objective now.

communities do not have a chance in this DEMOCRAT/MEDIA/COMPLEX.

Anonymous said...

communities do not have a chance in this DEMOCRAT/MEDIA/COMPLEX.

Kinda funny remark old man...Most developers and landlords are republican. Your favorite rag The Post always carry's water for them...what's that about the media?

Anonymous said...

prove it....

Queens Crapper said...

Most developers and landlords in this city are not even American and therefore registered voters, so how can you determine their political party? The tweeders who accept their money however, are a different story.

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