ONE YEAR LATER,
CITY LANDMARKS JUST 3.6% OF
HISTORIC BUILDINGS IN
ENDANGERED AREA
SOUTH OF UNION SQUARE,
FAILS
TO MOVE AHEAD
ON OTHER WEAK “PROTECTIONS”
PROMISED AS PART OF TECH HUB DEAL Still no signs of movement from Mayor or
Councilmember Rivera on
comprehensive neighborhood
protections Rivera originally promised
as a condition of her Tech Hub support
The seven buildings landmarked today.
This morning the Landmarks Preservation Commission voted to landmark 817, 826, 830, 832, 836, and 841 Broadway, after public hearings in December and February where the Commission faced criticism from neighborhood and preservation groups for not taking a broader approach to landmarking in the area. The vote is a huge disappointment, as the City has refused to consider landmark designation or any other substantial protections for the nearly 200 buildings on a dozen blocks of this part of Greenwich Village and the East Village, where historic buildings can and are being torn down to make way for large high-rise hotels, office towers, and condos. The landmarking of these seven buildings, none of which (unlike many of their neighbors) are currently endangered, comes nearly a year after the City Planning Commission and City Council approved the upzoning nearby for a ‘Tech Hub’ lobbied for and to be developed by the Mayor’s donors and fundraisers. Today’s action is also only a fraction of what Councilmember Rivera promised would come as part of her agreement with the Mayor to approve the upzoning, and is only a fraction of a fraction of what she had promised to condition her support for the Tech Hub upon when she ran for office.
When Councilmember Rivera ran for City Council in 2017, she publicly committed in writing on a candidate questionnaire from Village Preservation that she would only approve the Mayor’s proposed Tech Hub on 14th Street if the Mayor agreed to the comprehensive landmark and zoning protections for the adjacent Greenwich Village/East Village neighborhood, saying “without the needed zoning protections for the neighborhood, [the Tech Hub] would lead to acceleration in out of scale development for the surrounding residential neighborhood.” However, last summer, she led the City Council in approvingthe upzoning necessary for the Tech Hub with a pale shadow of the promised neighborhood protections as part of the announced deal.
Click to enlarge
Almost a year later, most of what was promised in even that watered-down deal has not been enacted. That included:
Village Preservation and others have been very critical of the Tech Hub deal, which benefitted donors to and fundraisers for the Mayor, gave away valuable public land on 14th Street for private development for a song, and included no written record whatsoever of why the Mayor’s donors were chosen over any of the other proposals submitted for the site, which good government group Citizen Union criticized – read more here and here.
We are continuing to fight for comprehensive landmark protections for this area, which is incredibly rich in history and architecture.
Let Councilmember Rivera, Mayor de Blasio, and the Landmarks Preservation Commission know that this isnot enough – Greenwich Village and the East Village NEED AND DEMAND REAL LANDMARK PROTECTIONS.