475-Kent-Avenue-Brooklyn-020808.jpg
In the wake of this week’s meeting with the DOB and FDNY, the tenants of 475 Kent Avenue in Williamsburg submitted a written appeal to Mayor Bloomberg today (cc’ing about every pol in town along with the Mayor of London) to let them back into their homes and workspaces. “As the vacate enacted by the FDNY on January 20th drags on, many of us risk bankruptcy and the complete destruction of the businesses and careers we have spent the last decade building at 475 Kent Ave.,” closes the first paragraph of the letter. Full text on the jump.
DOB, FDNY Deliver Bad News to 475 Kent Tenants [Brownstoner]
475 Kent Avenue: How It All Began [Brownstoner] GMAP
Big Showing From Pols at 475 Kent Vigil [Brownstoner]
Closing Bell: Moving Out at 475 Kent Avenue [Brownstoner]
‘Commune of Creative Types’ in the Burg is Emptied Out [Brownstoner]

February 8, 2008

To:
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg
City Hall
New York, NY 10007

Dear Mayor Bloomberg,

The situation for the 200+ tenants of 475 Kent Avenue has become desperate as our livelihoods and businesses are increasingly threatened. Everyday that our work places are shuttered we miss a deadline, lose a client or a contract and fail to make a sale of the goods and services that support our lives. As the vacate enacted by the FDNY on January 20th drags on, many of us risk bankruptcy and the complete destruction of the businesses and careers we have spent the last decade building at 475 Kent Ave.

Whether or not the state of 475 Kent posed immanent threat to human life on the night of January 20th, 2008, it certainly does not today. In fact, our building is safer than most factory buildings in the city. It is of solid fireproof construction, has two means of egress, has working standpipes and Siamese connections, emergency exit lights, fire extinguishers and smoke detectors.

The architectural plans for the building are being filed with the DOB today and the work to rehabilitate the sprinkler system will be underway by next week. We need access to our studios NOW. Upholding the vacate order is unreasonable and is now truly endangering our lives as many of the tenants face financial ruin. What we are headed for now is a real emergency. We have had architectural and fire-safety experts survey our building and they have deemed that it is safe for inhabitants and for fire fighters. Fire Guards are often employed in buildings where sprinkler systems are not in place or are being repaired. We have had Fire-Safety companies report to us that Fire Guards have been used in buildings without working sprinkler systems for up to two years. In case it wasn’t clear, our building is constructed of one-foot thick cast concrete, a non-combustible material.

It is absolutely untenable for us to wait for the completion of work on the sprinkler system to gain access to our studios. Even if this work could be expedited in 3 – 4 weeks (and most estimates put it at 2 – 3 months) we cannot afford to be out of work for a moment longer.

Mayor Bloomberg, we need you to get us back into our studios and back to work NOW. We have architects and fire-safety experts who are willing to file expert opinions regarding the safety of our building. We call on you to do everything in your power to save our businesses and the lives we have built at 475 Kent Avenue.

The Tenants of 475 Kent Avenue

CC:
Kate Levin, Commissioner NYC Department of Cultural Affairs
David Yassky, NY City Council Member
Marty Markowitz, Brooklyn Borough President
Joseph Lentol, NY State Assembly
Vito Lopez, NY State Assembly
Martin Connor, NY State Senator
Hillary Rodham Clinton, Senator NY
Charles Schumer, Senator NY
Barack Obama, Senator IL
Ken Livingston, Mayor of London


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

  1. I have never seen a group of more mean spirited people than one this website. The people in this building are paying market rents. Most of the people have been living here for a decade they are not trustifarians as most of the people who post on this website. If they had jobs they wouldn’t have the time to spend all their time being miserable.
    I hope that the folks from 475 Kent can return to their homes before too much more damage is done. Unfortunately when you live in a live/work loft you take the risk of something like this happening.
    The true sad fact is the true artist in NYC is dying and its become a city of self involved kids who either work on Wall Street or are substidized by Mom and Dad.
    It gets more boring by the day……

  2. I think they should be allowed to retrieve their possessions, sure. Live and work? Not until the space is legal. So… the walls are foot-tick slabs of concrete? Great. Fire axes can’t cut through concrete. I would suspect that is one reason why a working sprinkler system would be required.

    I really truly have all the sympathy in the world for these people up until the point — and this keeps happening every time I muster up more sympathy — some yahoo posts something about all of their important cultural contributions to like, society, New York, and Williamsburg. And then I lose it again. Then I remember everyone else who’s ever lost their illegal workspace, legal house, good housing deal in this city for whatever reason. Because there are tons of these stories. This is not a new story, a unique story, a special story and it would be wise to remember that. In fact it’s almost a murphy’s law — you have a good deal in New York? Someday, it may come to an end. Hopefully when it does you will not be 70 and have no savings or insurance.

    So please, please stop telling me about how important and wonderful you all are, oh denizens of 475 Kent. I happen to know some of you, actually. I even like you. I want everything to work out for you. Just, no one at 475 is omgspeshul. Seriously. You’re really not.

    /endrant

  3. “After all this time, my theory is the landlord is in cahoots the city/FDNY because the sinister plan is to sell the waterfront bldg to developers.”

    I know a former tenant who claims that, to the contrary, the FDNY actually has it out for the landlord because there was a death in a fire at another building they owned. This is not a tenant vs. evil landlord case. They believe it its the city and FDNY that are wrong.

1 2 3 4 5