ADDITION AND CORRECTION. Opponents of Ratner's Atlantic Yards Plan [Do Not Yet] Gain
UPDATE, April 4, 3:30pm. An hour ago Aaron Naparstek posted telling comments about the Empire State Development Corporation's (ESDC) Final Scope for the Atlantic Yards development, at The Bad News Net. The ESDC's scoping document is 50 pages long, and I shall comment further when I have read it. Bruce Ratner's Atlantic Yards project is now and always has been a terrible idea. What Adam says today about the scoping document's provisions for enormous amounts of parking and for street-widenings persuades me that the ESDC is not only backing a terrible project, but it is making huge mistakes in execution.
I originally thought that if the Times represented that opponents were making progress against Atlantic Yards, public perception was more important than the ESDC's actual errors. If the scoping document is as bad as Aaram says, it is too late to talk about public perception. It is time to nail down the Atlantic Yards proposal. More to follow.
MY EARLIER POST: According to The New York Times, opponents of Bruce Ratner's massive Atlantic Yards project in Brooklyn have gained ground. According to a report in The New York Times by Nicholas Confessore, Arena Complex Shrinks by 5% in Latest Plan, developer Bruce Ratner has announced that he will shrink the size of the project by five per cent, "granting some concessions to critics who said it would overwhelm the surrounding neighborhood." In addition, The Empire State Development Corporation (ESDC), the lead agency taking the project through the State's environmental review process, not only agreed to study the effect that alternative proposals would have on the area, it also expanded the area that the review process will study.
The document on which State environmental review focuses is called an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). For every project, the developer and the state, with limited opportunity for public comment, determine what questions--the "scope" of review--this environmental study must answer. Thus, ESDC's concessions in the scoping process are, as The Times says, "significant victory" for critics. Up until now, the ESDC has refused to consider alternative proposals, and it has maintained that study of the project's effects should be limited to its immediate area. The three alternative proposals the ESDC will now consider, however, will include the proposal from the rival developer, Extell Corporation, that project critics in the coalition Develop Don't Destroy Brooklyn themselves brought into the bidding process for the Atlantic Yards site with the Metropolitan Transit Authority. The ESDC has also agreed now to expand the main geographic area of the study to half a mile from the project site, from a quarter mile, and to increase from 65 to 93 the number of intersections where traffic impact will be studied.
The Ratner project remains far too large for Brooklyn, too tall, too dense, and too wide, even after yesterday's five-per-cent reduction in bulk. As DDDB spokesman Dan Goldstein told The Times, it is larger than when Ratner first announced his plans. In addition, the scope of the environmental review, as a vice-president of the Regional Plan Association, Christopher Jones, noted, fails to consider the project's impact beyond its expected completion date, 2016.
Ratner's Atlantic Yards project is overdevelopment at its worst. For further information and commentary on Atlantic Yards, stay tuned to Norman Oder's Atlantic Yards Report.
