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We all know that homeowners get slapped with a fine for not cleaning up the leaves on their sidewalk. But what happens when the Army Corps of Engineers, which has mastered the art of shirking its responsibility at Officers Row over recent decades, fails to maintain its share of the public sidewalk out in front?


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  1. Guest 6:30,

    Pretty much everthing you said is wrong. As B’stoner noted, the land is still very much owned by the feds. Also, although the Navy Yard is getting rent from the studios, over all they still do not make enough money to cover their enormous capital expenses. There are huge chunks of the Navy Yard’s infrastructure that need to be replaced (electricity, water, sewer, roads). And just stabilizing the building buildings and opening them up would cost tens of millions of dollars. That’s not as easy as you make it sound.

    -Ella

  2. Brownstoner, you’ve got to change your headline. It’s the city that is shirking its responsibility. The US government transferred the Navy Yards to the city and then held on to Officer’s Row. But they gave it over eventually to the city as well. And then the city just let the row rot. Leaves are just more evidence that the city and the navy yard authority (which is a private corp now I believe run for the city) could care less about the neighborhood. They must be making money now from the studios and everything else they have in the Navy Yards. And yet they have conspired to screw over the neighborhood by putting in a box store when they are good and ready in place of the historic row houses they just let rot. Reminds me of Angor Wat or something. They should just open it up to the public and stabilize the buildings and then get them renovated as much as possible.