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As has been suggested elsewhere, despite the fact that the DOB granted Whole Foods a permit to do underpinning work for its proposed store at 3rd Street and 3rd Avenue earlier in the month, the would-be Gowanus supermarket still faces some regulatory barriers. In addition to needing a full-on new building permit, the Department of Environmental Conservation still has to sign off on the job. As it turns out, the DEC is still reviewing Whole Foods’ application to build on a wetlands. According to Thomas V. Panzone, the department’s citizen participation specialist for our region, “Whole Foods has submitted an application for an Article 15 Protection of Waters Permit, a Water Quality Certification under Section 404 of the Clean Water Act , and an Article 25 Tidal Wetlands Permit.” English translation (best as we can tell!): Whole Foods must prove that the store’s location next to the canal won’t adversely affect the general public and that the supermarket won’t harm the canal by virtue of its existence next to the waterway. Panzone also says that once the DEC deems Whole Foods’ application complete it will “trigger established public participation processes,” a 30-day window for the public to comment on the store’s application that may include a public hearing. The DEC already held a public-review period about the grocer’s brownfield cleanup plan last January and approved Whole Foods’ remediation plan for the site. As it stands now, then, construction isn’t going to begin on the supermarket for some time, and it’s possible that concerns about the development’s environmental impact—which have repeatedly been raised by a local group called Friends & Residents of Greater Gowanus—will be taken into further consideration.
DOB Green Lights First Stage of Whole Foods Project [Brownstoner] GMAP DOB
Gowanus Whole Foods Still Faces a Few Hurdles [Gowanus Lounge]


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  1. Open your eyes. The City, State, and Federal governments are beginning a 40-year process of trying to clean up the canal. They and the private sector are going to spend BILLIONS of dollars over that time in this effort. While the canal is toxic now, there is some hope that 40 years from now it will be less so. If you are building on a polluted site you have to make sure that you either remove the underground pollution or trap it so that it doesn’t leak into the canal or other neighboring sites (see failure of Lowes remediation). If you are building on wetlands you need to take into account flooding and high ground-water.

    That being said, all this can be done and this is dragging on too long. The coming redevelopment of the Gowanus area needs serious cooperation between all levels of government that is not happening right now.

  2. I really hope the Friends of the Gowanus don’t try to kill this project. Those folks are probably exactly the type of people who would shop at a Whole Foods. Did the Lowes store have this much trouble building it’s location next to the wetland, uh, I mean canal? What a joke!

  3. Tesco have just started in California, and it appears to be going very well. Lets all hope they can come to the East coast and save us from Met foods and the like, and end this WholeFoods will they-won’t they purgatory.

  4. Rehab:

    Its a very highly publicized brownfield, so its not like they can just build over it. The clean up is extensive, and because it borders the toxic and mighty Gowanus Canal, it poses more problems.

    Now if this was a condo over an oilfield in williamsburg, that would be another story..

    (rimshot)

  5. I kinda wish they’d found a site on 4th Ave. Better for subway commuters, easier for shoppers on foot coming from the Slope, sites are large enough to accomodate a big store + parking. Or, better yet, just open several mini-Whole Foods. Man, I wish we had the kind of small Tesco supermarkets I’ve seen in London: 5,000 sq ft but enough space to offer qual and duck eggs alongside the regular variety. I wonder how there So. Cal. experiment is going? Too bad they didn’t start here in NYC first.

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