Thursday, April 25, 2024

BP Richards Creedmoor of Yes gets resistance.

 https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/qchron.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/a/f4/af449897-aa6e-52a8-adad-7ef35c61a407/662a726e3c3c1.image.jpg?resize=750%2C786 

Queens Chronicle

Seventeen Eastern Queens civic leaders reiterated their opposition to the state’s redevelopment plan for much of the Creedmoor Psychiatric Center property last week after Borough President Donovan Richards touted it as a “community-led effort” in a newsletter.

Area civic groups oppose the plan because, they say, it will be too dense for the region, with buildings that are too tall and lack adequate parking, and that it will be too great a strain on existing infrastructure including roads and sewers.

Richards, who regularly speaks of the need for more housing in Queens and touts the projects slated to produce it, included an item headlined “A New Day is Dawning at Creedmoor” in a newsletter his office said was mailed to tens of thousands of homes across Queens last week. The missive was timed to follow his April 12 State of the Borough address.

“The largest community development project in the history of Eastern Queens is on the horizon in the form of Borough President Richards and Empire State Development’s draft Creedmoor Community Master Plan,” the piece says. “The community-led effort aims to redevelop 50 vacant acres of state land through the creation of more than 2,000 units of housing, with 55 percent being designated for homeownership.”

Empire State Development, the agency planning the project, has proposed 2,873 units of housing on 58 acres of the Creedmoor campus. The plan includes 813 elevator co-ops in buildings of six to eight stories, 536 walk-up co-ops in buildings of three to four stories, 186 triplexes in three-story structures and 98 semidetached two-family homes of two stories. There would be 377 senior homes, 431 supportive housing units and 432 apartments deemed affordable and granted by lottery, in buildings of six to eight stories.

The civic leaders said in a letter emailed to Richards on April 19 that they object to his calling the project “community-led,” since area neighborhood organizations do not support the plan and saw their own proposals for the property overridden.

They want a maximum of 1,000 units of two to three stories, and note that Community Board 13 passed a resolution to that effect.

“The plan by Empire State Development is not acceptable,” the civics’ letter says. “The layout is primarily four story, six story and eight story buildings, which are not compatible with our communities. In fact, except for one six story apartment building at 259th Street you will not find anything on the Hillside Avenue corridor from Winchester Boulevard to the city line higher than two stories.”

 

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

So where will the Q-Anon creep go if Creedmoor is shut down?

Anonymous said...

Just disgusting. Creedmoor should stay as a mental facility and that's it. In fact, with all the crazies In nyc, Creedmoor should be expanded to hold more mental people. It should be made into a full blown asylum for the crazies in nyc

Anonymous said...

Creedmoor is only 30% full...

Anonymous said...

@ First Anon...
Do you even know what you are screaming and yelling about?
Some misguided readers here like you hold legitimately heinous views.

Anonymous said...

This is corruption. and its accepted now.
Fanni Willis syndrome

Anonymous said...

Donnie Richards has never seen a development project he didn't like. He has zero care over anybody who actually lives here in Queens and pays his effing salary with their tax dollars.