Dear PlanNYC Users:
Thank you for visiting PlanNYC.
As of July 7, 2010, we have suspended daily news updating on this website, and will not be adding new developments or policy and legislative debates.
PlanNYC, a student-run website based at NYU’s Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy, has proudly served New Yorkers for five years. During that time, the growth of online information on land use and development issues, along with advances in technology such as RSS feeds and news alerts, have created many opportunities for New Yorkers to stay informed about housing and land use debates in the City. As a result, the daily news updating on this site has become less unique and less critical to our users.
We are pleased to keep the existing PlanNYC content online as a resource; all content on the site is current of July 6, 2010, but will not be updated after that date.
We hope you continue to use the data and research available at the Furman Center (which you can find at www.furmancenter.org), and we welcome your ideas and suggestions for how we can continue to provide objective information and analysis about land use and housing policy debates in New York City.
For additional information or questions, please email furmancenter@nyu.edu.
Thank you for visiting PlanNYC.
As of July 7, 2010, we have suspended daily news updating on this website, and will not be adding new developments or policy and legislative debates.
PlanNYC, a student-run website based at NYU’s Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy, has proudly served New Yorkers for five years. During that time, the growth of online information on land use and development issues, along with advances in technology such as RSS feeds and news alerts, have created many opportunities for New Yorkers to stay informed about housing and land use debates in the City. As a result, the daily news updating on this site has become less unique and less critical to our users.
We are pleased to keep the existing PlanNYC content online as a resource; all content on the site is current of July 6, 2010, but will not be updated after that date.
We hope you continue to use the data and research available at the Furman Center (which you can find at www.furmancenter.org), and we welcome your ideas and suggestions for how we can continue to provide objective information and analysis about land use and housing policy debates in New York City.
For additional information or questions, please email furmancenter@nyu.edu.
Design for BP's Coney Island Amphitheater Revealed
CONEY ISLAND REZONING & DEVELOPMENT
BROOKLYN COMMUNITY DISTRICT 13
BROOKLYN COMMUNITY DISTRICT 13
April 9, 2009
Brooklyn Papers
The design for the $64 million outdoor amphitheater in Coney Island’s Asser Levy Park has been revealed. The theater, which some are calling “The Chip” because of its potato chip-like shape, is Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz’s pet project and is scheduled to open in 2011. Some neighbors are concerned that the 8,000 seat amphitheater will be noisy and ruin the area’s only open space, but architecture design magazine BD said that 3,000 seats can be removed when the amphitheater is not in use so that it can be used as a park. Markowitz hopes that “The Chip” will compete with Long Island’s Jones Beach as a summer concert venue.

