U.K. Forces Ikea to Build Smaller Stores and Locate Near Transit Hubs
Little England has now stood up to the mighty Ikea on its demands to build gigantic, overscale, automobile-dependent stores, and the British government has won. If only the New York City Planning Commission and the City Council had had the same courage as the British to turn Ikea down when it demanded approval for a huge suburban store with a 1,400-car parking lot on the remote waterfront in Red Hook, Brooklyn.
As this blog has always maintained, New Yorkers need to open up a civil discussion, to talk about requiring that big box stores like Ikea and Wal-Mart conform to New York City's traditions. Three cheers for the British! They have shown us all the way.
"In February," according to James MacLean of the Evening Standard, "Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott refused plans for a £30m [Ikea] store near Stockport." Read MacLean's entire piece here. Ikea has run into so much trouble trying to get additional giant stores past U.K. planning standards, that Ikea has actually reduced the size of its future stores. As the first step, it has submitted plans for a small town center store in Hillingdon in west London. Remarkably, it even says it plans to add housing to future stores, and to site new stores near public transit. This is exactly the sort of limit that New York City should long ago have discussed forcing Ikea, Wal-Mart, and the rest of the big boxes to adopt.
The Hillingdon plans "include a six-story mixed-use scheme on a 4.5 acre site next to Hillingdon Tube station." The Ikea store will be only 86,000 square feet in size. Compare that with the 346,000 square feet that Ikea claims it will need in Red Hook, Brooklyn, the proposed store that it aims to make into its largest store in the world. The Hillingdon development will also include one-and two-bedroom apartments. MacLean adds, "The mixed-use strategy is also likely to appeal to local authority planning departments because of the provision of affordable housing." A bit more information appears on MoneyPlans.com.
It won't be easy to restrain the boxes, as Wal-Mart recently demonstrated with its vicious, inflammatory campaign against size limits, even invoking Nazi imagery, in Flagstaff, Arizona. The fight is so tough that the Irish government recently caved in to Ikea's threat that if it did not get planning permission for a huge store in Dublin, it would build in Belfast, even though increasing the permitted store size will increase sprawl and ruin Ireland's lovely local high streets.
Nonetheless, if the British can force Ikea to conform to local size limits, local building practices and local traditions, then so can New York City. We do not need to play the helpless victim as the big boxes chop up the city with their huge suburban stores, sprawling parking lots, and demands for new highways, and while they destroy our valued neighborhood shopping streets. Granting Ikea permission to build on the almost-inaccessible waterfront of Red Hook, Brooklyn, with no highway off-ramp for more than a mile, no subway, and narrow cobblestone streets, is especially feckless. As the Village Voice said, Red Hook is the best place in New York City not to put an Ikea.
Stand up, New York City Council!
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