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Cooper Square Urban Renewal AreaRSS

In 2000, Chrystie Venture Partners (CVP) was selected to construct a $230 million mixed-use development, one of the largest development projects in HPD's history, on four sites in the Cooper Square Urban Renewal Area. When completed, CVP will create 712 residential units - 25 percent of which are reserved by the city for affordable, below-market-rate-rent apartments - almost 200,000-square-feet of retail space and a 30,000-square-foot community recreation center. In addition, two community gardens, the Liz Christy Garden and the Rock 'n' Rose Garden, at the corners of Houston Street with Second Avenue and the Bowery, will be preserved.

In June 2005 AvalonBay Communities opened the first of its luxury rental apartments in the Cooper Square development, realizing the city’s long-term vision for the redevelopment of the location on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. The project represents part of the last leg of the community’s alternate plan to former city planning czar Robert Moses’ 1969 scheme to build a Stuyvesant Town-like complex of buildings in an urban renewal area between Delancey and Ninth Streets, between the Bowery and Second Avenue. Led by the Cooper Square Committee, local housing activists in the 1970s got the urban renewal zone reduced to the area between Stanton and Fifth Streets and fought to preserve much of the existing housing stock for low-income residents. In the 1990s, a Cooper Square Task Force was created to come up with a concept plan for projects on the final few largely undeveloped sites.

Avalon Chrystie Place also includes a community center — built by AvalonBay — which includes a competition-size pool. The neighborhood community center, operated in a partnership between University Settlement and the Chinatown Y, is located on the Bowery and opened in early 2006. In 2007 Whole Foods Markets will be opening one of their largest retail stores in the country in the first and second floors of Avalon Chrystie Place. While Avalon Chrystie Place is now nearly completely rented, AvalonBay has begun construction on its second rental apartment building — on the Bowery and the north side of East Houston Street. A nine-story building, it will feature 206 rental apartments, a lounge, a roof terrace, and fitness center for residents, along with 20,000 square feet of ground-floor retail space.

An important part of the entire Cooper Square project is the affordable apartments. Each of the three AvalonBay buildings includes affordable apartments. The Phipps Houses, a nonprofit housing developer, under the supervision of the City Department of Housing Preservation and Development and the State Housing Finance Agency, is managing the program for the affordable apartments. In addition, Phipps Houses is constructing a fourth building located on the Bowery at East First Street, which will offer 42 affordable apartments and ground-floor retail space.

“Extra Place” in LES Transforms Into Pedestrian Mall

Avalon Bay Company will develop an alleyway, called “Extra Place,” located behind the CBGB Club and famous for its punk history in the 1970s. Much to the dismay of some local residents and those once affiliated with the club, the area will be transformed into a pedestrian mall with space for 6-8 retailers. This plan in conjunction with various other changes in the neighborhood, along the Bowery and East 1st Street, is upsetting some neighbors who fear their community is losing its character.

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Residents Oppose Liquor License for Cooper Square Hotel

Residents of the East 5th Street Block Association are urging that the liquor license be denied for the Cooper Square Hotel until a terrace which is located 30 feet from a residential apartment building be enclosed. Although Community Board 3 has worked out some arrangements with the Hotel to mitigate the imposed sound, including limiting hours of operation and patrons on the terrace, local residents believe the space must be enclosed before approval of an application to serve liquor is allowed. The State Liquor Authority will hear arguments on January 8th on this issue.

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Cooper Square Urban Area Development Set to Begin

Starting in January, construction is set to begin on four controversial buildings that will be part of the Cooper Square Urban Renewal Area, the largest urban renewal project to date in New York. While the project has been debated for roughly 30 years, some in the community are disappointed at the process by which the city has moved forward with the plans, including limited notice of public meetings and lack of comprehensive information on the plan for the public. Many area residents are also concerned by the lack of affordable housing in the complex developed by Chrystie Venture Partners. The Cooper Square Committee, formed in 1959, is supportive of the development plans.

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