Thanks Kenn.
DIFFERING VIEWS: DUMBO Neighborhood Association' President Nancy Webster (above) says the Jehovah's Witnesses' residential rezoning in Brooklyn poses a threat to the area's development. |
December 14, 2003 -- Another real estate turf war is cooking in Brooklyn.
This one squares off DUMBO dwellers against Jehovah's Witnesses, whose plans to build a massive housing complex has the trendy neighborhood residents from Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass fuming.
The religious group recently applied for city rezoning to develop a six-building, 1,000-unit residential complex at 85 Jay St., directly adjacent to the only subway station in the red-hot 'hood.
Locals are angry because they say the castle-like complex will detract from the developing area's industrial aesthetic and waste potentially valuable retail space in what could soon be a well-trafficked corridor.
"This huge parcel is going to become the heart of the neighborhood, and we don't want our heart to be a fortress," said DUMBO Neighborhood Association President Nancy Webster.
The proposed complex is located on a three-acre block bounded by Jay, Bridge, Front and York Streets where the Witnesses have accumulated property since the 1980s.
Surrounded by converted industrial buildings and three- and four-story brownstones, the complex features towers that will range between 14 and 20 stories and an underground garage for more than 1,000 cars but allots no space for retail, according to Witnesses representative Richard Devine.
"A commercial enterprise is outside the scope of our purpose as an organization," Devine said. "This would give us flexibility to consolidate some of our residents and bring life, pedestrian activity and security to an area that sorely needs development."
Enraged DUMBO residents posted a Web site last week called 85jaystreet.org to encourage an anti-rezoning letter-writing campaign.
They say the Witnesses have been cooperative in discussing development issues but disapprove of the fact that the group would be exempt from paying property taxes.
"They tend to be very insular and don't engage with the arts festivals or the resources of the community," said Marcia Hillis, an artist who lives in the area. "It will be 2,000 people walking through [DUMBO] to get to their own walled structure."
Residential real estate in the artsy neighborhood has doubled in value since 1999, with the average condo selling for up to $1 million, said Domenick Neglia of Brooklyn's Neglia Appraisals.
Neglia said the proposed complex was "very valuable" but predicted the Witnesses' presence would not negatively impact the neighborhood's character.
"In five years, this will be the hottest neighborhood in Brooklyn, and the addition of these 2,000 people will be a very small percentage of the population," he said. "People aren't concerned about living across the street from them."
The Witnesses have worked with architectural firm Beyer Blinder Belle to match the complex's design to buildings in the area, Devine said.
"We don't want to create animosity with our neighbors," he said. "We're not a developer who's going to build a building and then run away."
Experts like Jed Walentas, vice president of major DUMBO developer Two Trees Management, questioned the Witnesses refusal to incorporate retail space into the complex's plans.
"To have that be an active, lit, public component is critical to long-term development," he said.
The Department of City Planning is currently reviewing the Witness' environmental impact statement for the site, according to representative Rachael Raynoff.
The Witnesses own several other properties throughout Brooklyn, including a million-square-foot Bible shipping facility at 360 Furman St. in Brooklyn Heights, which they listed for sale six weeks ago.
sKally