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Bronx CD08 Projects

Bronx Community District 08


5676 Riverdale Avenue
Bronx, NY 10471
Phone: 718.884.3959
Fax: 718.796.2763
Email: brxcb8@optonline.net

Fieldston Landmark DesignationRSS

The City Council approved designating the Fieldston District of the Bronx, an enclave within the Riverdale neighborhood that contains 257 buildings, a historic landmark on April 26, 2006. The District was originally a privately owned estate, and its transformation into a suburban community was deliberately planned. The designation means approval will be required for making many cosmetic changes, and its critics have said this will reduce property values. Advocates of the designation argue that current regulations provide insufficient protection, and that the community will embrace the changes as necessary to preserve the character of the District.

Van Cortlandt Park Filtration PlantRSS

The city plans to build a water filtration plant in Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx underground in the southeast corner of the park beneath the Mosholu Golf Course driving range. The city needs to build the plant because it is under a court order to filter the 10 percent of the water supply that comes from the Croton watershed to meet federal drinking-water standards. Other water from the Delaware and Catskillis is exempt. After opposition groups sued, the state's highest court ruled in 2001 that the city could not use parkland for the plant without the approval of the State Legislature. Mayor Michael Bloomberg brokered a deal with Bronx politicians to bypass Assemblyman Dinowitz by promising $243 million in additional funding for Bronx parks – including $43 million for Van Cortlandt Park alone. The city promises to restore the driving range upon completion of the project.

Residents living near the park oppose the plan, arguing that it will create health problems, ruin precious greenery and worsen traffic in the area. Neighbors say that a park adjoining a densely packed residential area is the wrong place for an industrial facility, especially when another location is available. Opponents of the project say the city never seriously considered the alternatives, particularly the Eastview site in Westchester, which has almost no residential neighbors. In addition, they say that the means used to obtain the parkland sets a disturbing precedent that puts other city parks at risk. In April 2007 the consortium chosen to build the billion dollar project opted out. Under what is now the best-case scenario, the price of the project would increase nearly 18 percent, from $1.127 billion to $1.328 billion.

Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy | NYU School of Law | 40 Washington Square South, Suite 314-H | New York, NY 10012 | 212-998-6713