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On the same day that it voted in favor of the Finger Building, the board also showed its developer-friendly leanings in the case of 163 Washington Avenue. As you may recall, GLC, the developer, has been appealing to the board to let it proceed with construction under the old zoning rules that would have allowed for a 17-story building on the site. At the first BSA hearing in October, the developer tried to refute the DOB’s analysis that the foundation was only 40% complete at the time the zoning changed, far short of what’s required to vest. By the time the second meeting had rolled around yesterday, the BSA had apparently made up its mind at a preview the day before to green-light the project despite GLC’s failure to make a convincing case about the foundation. It was only when the neighborhood opponents presented so much embarrassing evidence about inconsistencies in the developer’s story and timeline that the BSA had to push the decision back to a third hearing, presumably in January.
A Day at the BSA: GLC vs. Building Too Tall [Brownstoner] GMAP P*Shark DOB
Day of Reckoning for 163 Washington Avenue? [Brownstoner]
CB2 Votes on Two BSA Recs [Brownstoner]
CB2: Thumbs Down on Washington, Thumbs Up on Grand [Brownstoner]
Clinton Hill Rezoning Rejects Pitch BSA Bail-Out To CB2 [Brownstoner]
Race Against Clock at 163 Washington [Brownstoner]


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  1. An additional comment, barley relevant, but…

    Armchair, “if you want low density go live in the burbs or la lol.”

    Would one not equate urban sprawl the same as higher density, just stretched out over a larger area? When was the last time you visited LA? Brooklyn any day over La-La land or any great suburban wasteland.

    Whether you stack your pancakes high on the plate or spread them across the entire breakfast table, it’s still too many pancakes for this man to stomach.

    Wow, that analogy was totally silly (pat myself on my back, albeit softly)

  2. here’s a quote from Commissioner Srinivasan:
    “Regarding the daily field reports — the Logs — that information would be helpful. We understand there may be some corrections — as you’ve done already.”

    and here’s a great exchange …
    Commissioner Susan M. Hinkson, R.A.:
    “Is the Terrace the only way you make your [open space] zoning requirements?”

    Sheldon Lobel lawyer representing GLC Group:
    “I don’t know.”

  3. Here are a couple of my favorite quotes from the GLC Group’s lawyers, Sheldon Lobel P.C., during the hearing:

    “there were some bookkeeping problems”

    and

    “maybe the trucks have 2 numbers on them” …

  4. Sounds like some other cases at the BSA 2 years ago in the South Slope and Greenwood Heights. Can someone say “legal precedent” here to the BSA against the vesting? No?

    Mr. B ought to link to those posts on this thread to show how BSA may need a repeat performance.

  5. The issue here isn’t density; it is the configuration of the density. The developer can build just as many apartments without constructing a building substantially taller than its neighbors. False argument, seated warrior.

  6. armchairwarrior,

    Tell the developer that, they are the ones who tried to reduce the density when they altered their original plans. The plan they are trying to strong-arm through the boot-licking BSA has LESS DENSITY than the original plan that everyone in the community would have been fine with.