How the Ikea-Red Hook Hearing Relates to Big Box Questions
The proposed tax-subsidized Ikea-Red Hook project is so inappropriate for the Red Hook waterfront that the Village Voice called Red Hook the "best place in New York City not to put an Ikea." Red Hook has no subway. The proposed Ikea-Red Hook site is more than a mile from the overburdened Gowanus Expressway. It is at the foot of Red Hook's narrow cobblestone streets. Brooklyn residents and businesses have brought a lawsuit to challenge the city's approval of Ikea-Red Hook. The full transcript of Thursday's hearing, at which attorney Antonia Bryson of the Urban Environmental Law Center argued Brooklyn plaintiffs' case in New York State Supreme Court, now appears on this blog.
It may surprise non-lawyers to learn that the lawsuit is not directly about whether Ikea should build a big box project on the Brooklyn waterfront. Nor is it directly about the urgent issue of whether New York City should build big box stores if that means putting our neighborhood shopkeepers out of business. Under the New York City Charter, citizens did not have a direct say on those questions. Rather, the lawsuit asserts legal grounds to challenge the City Council's and the City Planning Commission's approval of the project. Plaintiffs have a heavy legal burden.
One of plaintiffs' main contentions is that Ikea omitted and distorted vital facts in its Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). The EIS is the key disclosure document developers submit in the ULURP process. Plaintiffs contend that the City Council was so eager to turn the Red Hook waterfront over to Ikea that it rubber-stamped the EIS despite those defects. Ikea entirely omitted, for example, the effect of the Ikea project's 6,000 automobile trips per weekday on congestion on the already-choked Gowanus Expressway. Plaintiffs' other main contention is that the City Council and City Planning Commission failed to acknowledge the city's own waterfront plan and the community's Red Hook 197-a plan, which the City Council had approved in 1996. Such 197-a plans involve communities in planning for their neighborhoods, and Ms. Bryson argued that they are legally the city's Master Plan. See the Press Advisory about Thursday's hearing.
There are many non-legal objections to Ikea-Red Hook. The proposed Ikea-Red Hook project would set bad planning precedent for the entire city. See Ten (10) Reasons to Oppose Ikea-Red Hook.
Can we New Yorkers talk? Can we plan for our city, instead of letting developers build anything, anywhere, that they can get through the City Council? If we New Yorkers decide that we do want to permit more of these suburban big box stores, should we or should we not insist that they must look like other New York City stores, fit in with New York City's public transit system, pay their employees like other New York City employers? Shouldn't we think in advance about the damage big boxes will do to our neighborhood shopkeepers? About the damage the big boxes' automobile dependency will do to our transit-oriented city? Shouldn't we take appropriate action to preserve one of New York City's greatest amenities, our walkable shopping streets? The purpose of this blog, BigCitiesBigBoxes.com, is to open that larger civic discussion about the big box stores.
