Mayor de Blasio Celebrates Council Passage of Gowanus Neighborhood Plan

November 23, 2021De Blasio administration’s largest rezoning to freshen up  decades-old codes in dynamic, transit-rich neighborhoodPlan delivers $250 million in new public investment for  public parks, resilient infrastructure, and community amenitiesNEW YORK— The de Blasio Administration and Council Members Brad  Lander and Stephen Levin today celebrated the City Council’s approval of the Gowanus Neighborhood Plan, the first change to  Gowanus’ zoning codes in sixty years. After nearly a decade of engagement with  community groups and elected officials, the final plan will make space for  approximately 8,500 new homes, including 3,000 permanently affordable homes.  The rezoning will also provide long-needed tools to bolster job growth, support  industrial businesses, encourage new schools and transit improvements, and  create a unique set of publicly accessible waterfront areas along a cleaned-up  Gowanus Canal.The Plan includes $250 million in  supporting investments for new and improved public parks, upgraded drainage  infrastructure, and community amenities. An additional $200 million will  address priority capital improvements to adjacent NYCHA homes.“Rezoning Gowanus – and unlocking a  high-opportunity, transit-rich neighborhood in the heart of Brooklyn for new  generations of New Yorkers – is a transformative step toward building a  recovery for all of us,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “Thanks to years of  hard work from city agencies, elected officials, advocates, and Gowanus  residents, we’re finally bringing this neighborhood the jobs, housing, and open  space it deserves.”“I am thrilled to see through the  Gowanus Neighborhood Plan after so many years of dedicated, collaborative work  between the City, Council Members Lander and Levin, and the Gowanus community.  Opening up a centrally-located, well-resourced part of Brooklyn to more New  Yorkers is a critical step towards a fairer city,” said Deputy Mayor for  Housing and Economic Development Vicki Been. “I look forward to seeing the  growth and public investments advance to realize a more resilient and equitable  Gowanus.”“After years of focused planning  work, today is a day for celebration! Thanks to a highly-collaborative process  with the Gowanus community, Council Members Brad Lander and Stephen Levin, and  our sister agencies, this transit rich, centrally-located and historic Brooklyn  community will remain as creative and vibrant as ever, while also becoming much  more affordable, greener and more resilient,” said Department of City  Planning Director Anita Laremont. “I congratulate all of those who  contributed to this important plan.”The Gowanus Neighborhood Plan  supports an equitable recovery by facilitating the creation of thousands of  safe, affordable homes in a high-opportunity, transit-rich neighborhood. Of the  estimated 8,500 new homes to result from the rezoning, approximately 2,000 will  be permanently affordable under Mandatory Inclusionary Housing Program (MIH).  For example, many two-bedroom apartments will have rents as low as $900 per  month in a neighborhood that currently has asking rents that are often greater  than $2,500 per month.Another nearly 1,000 permanently  affordable homes will be constructed on city-owned land within the rezoning  area. The 100% affordable residential development, Gowanus Green, will also include a new public  school and a new park. At least half of the rental units in the project will  serve families earning $51,200 or less, including at least 140 homes to be set  aside for formerly homeless New Yorkers. The site will be fully remediated  ahead of construction.The Gowanus Neighborhood Plan is the  de Blasio administration’s largest neighborhood rezoning to date. The Plan  covers the area roughly bounded by Bond Street to the west, Baltic Street to  the north, 4th Avenue to the east, and Huntington, 3rd, 7th and 15th Streets to  the south.Supporting investments include $250  million in infrastructure and amenities to the direct rezoning area. Those  initiatives include:Nearly six acres of new public parks  and open spaces, improvements to existing open spaces, and requirements for a  publicly accessible waterfront esplanade:A new, city-owned waterfront park  adjacent to Gowanus Green and new open spaces such as the Salt Lot CSO tank  site and the Bond Street street endRenovations to Boerum ParkNew publicly accessible waterfront  spaces forming a continuous esplanade along the Canal, required to be part of  any future waterfront development per the new Gowanus Waterfront Access Plan  (WAP)Approximately $22 million in  pedestrian safety improvements$174 million to complete significant  upgrades to drainage infrastructure to alleviate flooding conditions in the  area, particularly in the vicinity of 4th Ave and Carroll Street. This investment will include the  reconstruction of existing sewer lines and the rehabilitation of the 19th Street Pump  Station.Requirements that new development  must clean up long-polluted brownfield sites, elevate their buildings to  protect against long-term daily tidal flooding, and meet new stormwater  management requirements that will reduce annual combined sewer overflow (CSO)  volumes.New innovative measures built into the zoning  regulations that incentivize:New school seats that may be needed  alongside future growthTransit accessibility improvements  to local subway stationsNew space for job-generating  businesses in the commercial, cultural, industrial and retail sectorsDedicated space for artists, light  manufacturing, and community uses in new development via a dedicated zoning  mechanism known as the “Gowanus Mix”Active uses on ground floors along  major streets and corners.Expanded small business assistance  and workforce development programming to expand access to new job opportunities  in the area.The commitments also include  approximately $200 million to address priority capital improvements to two  adjacent NYCHA developments, Gowanus Houses and Wyckoff Gardens, to ensure the  Plan incorporates the broader Gowanus community’s needs. The investment will  deliver comprehensive interior apartment renovations for all 1,662 units,  including newly renovated bathrooms and kitchens, new flooring, and upgrades to  lighting, electrical, and plumbing. The commitments also include the expansion  of the MAP initiative, the completion of renovations to the Gowanus and Wyckoff  Community Centers, and the expansion of free or low-cost broadband.The Gowanus Neighborhood Plan is  built on nearly a decade of community engagement between City Council,  Community Board 6, community organizations, residents, and a large City agency  team. The City and Council Members Lander and Levin have worked intensively  together since 2016, when the City kicked off an engagement process with  hundreds of meetings to shape the proposal. A two-year online engagement pilot  run by the Department of City Planning, plangowanus.com, received over 17,000 visitors  and over 250 comments to inform the plan. The City is committed to continued  coordination and accountability on the implementation of the Plan alongside the  Community Board and local stakeholders.“The future of Gowanus accelerates  forward today, anchored in affordability, equitable growth and resiliency,”  said HPD Commissioner Louise Carroll. “Bringing nearly 1,000 new  affordable homes and a new public waterfront park, the transformative Gowanus  Green project will be a cornerstone of the Gowanus Neighborhood Plan which is  guiding the growth of this vibrant community on the values of fairness and  inclusion. We are excited to join with community residents and local officials  as a critical partner to ensure Gowanus’ development serves a diversity of  families, including current and soon to be residents.”“Built on parks and public space  equity, the Gowanus plan offers a model of green urbanism not just for New York  City but for the rest of the country. Not only does the rezoning provide an  all-new 1.5-acre park, but it activates the waterfront to create a destination  shoreline walkway that reflects the Canal’s industrial past,” said NYC Parks  Commissioner Gabrielle Fialkoff. "As New York City grows, we must  continue to make resilient, accessible, and beautiful public spaces central to  our vision for the future. The Gowanus rezoning does just that.”“DEP is committed to further  improving drainage in the Gowanus neighborhood and restoring the health and  ecology of the Canal, and the forthcoming Stormwater Rule and approximately $1  billion overflow retention tanks will go a long way towards those goals,” said DEP  Commissioner Vincent Sapienza.  “From upgrading the Canal’s Flushing  Tunnel to building rain gardens and green playgrounds, separating sewers on 3rd  Avenue and upgrading the wastewater pumping station we have already invested  hundreds of millions of dollars and are using every tool in the toolbox to  improve the quality of life for residents and businesses in Gowanus.”“The Gowanus Rezoning shows that it  is possible for New Yorkers to plan together for a more inclusive and  sustainable city. That many people will accept growth in their neighborhood if  they are a real part of the planning process and see it as a way to achieve  shared values,” said Council Member Brad Lander. “This rezoning began in  community conversations, was strengthened through the advocacy of the Gowanus  Neighborhood Coalition for Justice and the robust participation of so many  neighbors through Community Board 6 and featured a partnership approach from  City Planning and City Hall. That ensured that the plan to open up Gowanus to  housing development would come along with real commitments to affordability and  preserving the mixed-use character of the neighborhood, the renovation of  neighboring public housing, and serious investments in the sewer, transit,  parks and school infrastructure needed to support inclusive growth. The plan we  voted on today, the first MIH rezoning in a whiter, wealthier area, includes  the strongest affordability and sustainability requirements ever imposed on  developers in NYC. As we recover from the pandemic, Gowanus provides a model  for the more integrated, vibrant, and resilient New York City we can build for  the future.”"This rezoning is truly  reflective of the community""s input and needs. Throughout my term, and that of  Council Member Lander, the future of the Gowanus neighborhood has been a topic  of many meetings and community planning sessions. Now we have arrived at a plan  that truly benefits the community by providing up to 3000 permanently  affordable apartments, substantial investment in the capital needs of Wyckoff  Gardens and Gowanus Houses, and improvements in our public spaces and drainage  infrastructure. My thanks to the members of the Gowanus Neighborhood Coalition  for Justice, the City Council Land use staff and the staff at the Brooklyn  office of City planning, Council Member Lander, and Deputy Mayor Bean and her  staff. We can all be proud of what we have achieved," said Council  Member Stephen Levin."The Gowanus rezoning is  different. It""s different because we put inclusion, equity, the environment,  NYCHA tenants, accountability, and justice at the center of this  rezoning.  It""s different because GNCJ""s dynamic multiracial coalition of  NYCHA tenants, affordable housing, environmental, industrial and arts advocates  and civic and religious leaders came together with our incredible  Councilmembers Brad Lander and Steve Levin in partnership.  We would not  back down until we secured GNCJ""s top demands and in that process we built  trust in each other and an expectation that the Adams administration and our  next Councilmembers will follow through on these hard-fought commitments.   A sincere thank you to Councilmembers Lander and Levin.  GNCJ couldn""t  have accomplished this out you.  A thank you too to Mayor de Blasio,  Deputy Mayor Been and their team.   This is a rezoning the  administration can be proud of, " said Michelle de la Uz, Executive  Director of Fifth Avenue Committee.# # #

日期:2022/01/12点击:33