Daniel Garodnick
Hoe-Down! Stuy Town Tenants Square Dance for Change
New York City Councilman and Peter Cooper Village resident Dan Garodnick helped Stuy Town (square) dance its way toward landmark designation on Saturday night, as tenants of the 110-building, World War II-era housing complex officially (re)launched their landmarks campaign.
We stopped by the party after 6 before any real dancing had begun, but the Gramercy Park church hall was already packed with mainly elderly residents decked out in denim, flannel, and other Western regalia, fuelling up on dinner before the main event.
Gaining protective status for Stuy Town is not a new idea. The Historic Districts Council first endorsed the proposal seven years ago and five years later told the Tenants Association that the complex was eligible for honorary state landmark status.
But the square dance was the first push to get the landmarking process off the ground since Tishman Speyer paid $5.4 billion for the planned community in 2006, though the tenants we spoke to Saturday night insisted the campaign is not related to their new landlord. read more »
Council Subcommittee OKs Solow's Towers by UN [UPDATED]
Developer Sheldon Solow received a key vote from a City Council subcommittee this morning, clearing the path, seven years after he agreed to buy the land, for him to build a $4 billion set of towers just south of the United Nations.
Mr. Solow’s plan, modified some in an agreement with local Councilman Daniel Garodnick, will bring seven towers to the 9.2-acre former Con Edison site, a site that is perhaps Manhattan’s largest single privately owned tract of undeveloped land. read more »
As Solow Scales Back East River Ambitions, Garodnick Vows 'Conversations' Over Traffic
Sheldon Solow has made a lot of concessions to get the City Council to green-light his massive mixed-use development covering almost 10 acres along the East River, but it looks like he will have to overcome a few more hurdles before the plans are approved.
At a public hearing before a City Council zoning subcommittee this afternooon in City Hall, Mr. Solow's representatives defended their application to build six residential buildings and a commercial office tower, while public officials stressed repeatedly that the project had yet to be approved. (Mr. Solow did not attend the hearing.)
Nonetheless, Mr. Solow's revised proposal seemed to address some, if not all, of the Murray Hill residents' concerns. He has offered to scale back the sizes of some of the buildings, and he has tried to allay fears that the towers would overshadow the United Nations Secretariat to the north. His representatives displayed renderings that showed the buildings not interfering with the UN building. read more »
Murray Hill to City and State: Here's How We See East River Park
If the city does not get behind a proposal to build a public park on the Murray Hill segment of the East River esplanade now when a trio of high-profile construction projects are in various stages of development, the five-year-old plan to build a green space in the area may never be realized.
With the public review process for Sheldon Solow’s 6.5 million-square-foot mixed-use development from 36th to 41st streets on First Avenue wrapping up—the plans are in the last stage of the approval process with City Council—and a hearing about the neighborhood’s rezoning approaching on Monday, a host of community groups and local politicos politely reminded city and state officials just how much they want a park. read more »
Garodnick, Others Keep Up the Heat for East River Park
With the City Council preparing a vote in coming weeks on Sheldon Solow’s plans for the Con Edison site; the UN expanding its campus into the nearby Marcus Garvey Park; and the reconstruction of the midtown portions of the FDR Drive set to kick off, Murray Hill residents are reminding city and state officials to prioritize the development of a waterside park in the area. read more »
Showdown in Murray Hill

On the far East Side site of the former Con Edison plant, patience appears to be a virtue for Sheldon Solow, the billionaire developer and owner of the land. For the seven-plus years since he agreed to buy the 9.2-acre site, Mr. Solow has slowly planned for a mostly residential development defined by seven modernist, skinny, Skidmore Owings & Merrill-designed towers to rise along the East River, just south of the United Nations, on the border of Turtle Bay and Murray Hill.
Now, five months into the city’s review and approval process, the clash over Manhattan’s largest privately owned development site is finally reaching a crescendo, as Mr. Solow’s plans for the $4 billion project will soon fall into the hands of the City Council, a body that seems poised to greet the proposal coolly, at least as currently presented. read more »
Forums and Fund-raisers Tonight
Staten Island City Council candidate Manny Innamaorato has a fund-raiser at the Beekman Pub, near City Hall, with Christine Quinn and several others featured on his invite.
Dan Garodnick is having a fund-raiser tonight at a funky art gallery downtown.
And Ben returns to the local scene to moderate a forum of City Council candidates running in Brooklyn a weird coffee shop.
-- Azi PaybarahFriday: The Masses and the Mayor Fight the Good Fights; Also, Staten Island Is Radioactive

Great Kills, kills great
- What kind of real estate power does the average New Yorker wield? Over in Brooklyn, citizen groups have banded together to "create room for negotiation" with Forest City Ratner. (FCR has already responded well to their "reasonable middle ground" position.) Then over in Stuy Town, the young Councilman Dan Garodnick and his 25,000 neighbors are fighting against multinational conglomerates. Who will win?! Tune in next week. (The New York Times)
- How does Mayor Mike make New York the foremost environmentally sustainable American city? By meeting with Governor Schwarzenegger in Sunnyvale, figuring out "a bold plan to use our land in the smartest way possible," enlisting the help of hotshot architects, politicos and execs, then painting his government "green." (See the post below for more.) (StreetsBlog)
- Give a warm 'hello' to the latest monster real estate investment trust. It's called Archstone-Smith, and it's hungry: the fancy Key West Building on Columbus Avenue has been bought by the group for $110m, and their new Avalon Bowery apartments will be finished in early 2007. Avalon is sure to succeed, because kids on the Bowery love their "cardio theatres". (Crain's)
- To everything there is a season, and therefore Staten Island will one day enjoy its place in the sun of outer borough hipness. For now, though, it's only a "hot spot" of unexpected and dangerous radioactivity, according to the Government Accountability Office. Great Kills Park needs a cleaning, and a new name. (AP via NY Daily News) - Max Abelson read more »
East Side Garbage
Matt Schuerman just called in from City Hall to say that a key opponent of a plan to re-open a garbage transfer station on East 91st Street has finally conceded.
"The sites in Manhattan are all part of the plan," Dan Garodnick told Matt a few minutes ago, as members of the Council's Sanitation Committee began to emerge from an extended closed-door meeting with administration officials. "I don't think anybody was willing to budge on them."
Garodnick, who represents a relatively wealthy district in Manhattan, said he still intends to vote against the city's final plan.
-- Josh BensonHousing Clinic
Community Board 5 just announced a housing clinic which it will hold on Tuesday, Feb. 28, at the Fashion Institute of Technology at 6 p.m. Housing experts will be on hand to discuss a multitude of issues: senior/supportive housing, rent-stabilization, 80/20 housing and condo/co-op conversions.Community Board 5 is a pretty professionally run board, so bring all your questions and concerns and ask away. And you don't need to be a resident of the board's district: All New York City residents are encouraged to attend.
Council member Dan Garodnick is slated to deliver the opening remarks, so if you want to lob him a few questions be sure to be there.
F.I.T., 227 West 27th Street, Building A, eighth floor, Feb. 28, 6 p.m. read more »
-Matthew Grace‘Partisan Paradox’ Dogs Upper East Side Races
'Partisan Paradox' Dogs Upper East Side Races
Mike's Base
It's been clear for a while that the Mayor has essentially traded in the outer-borough base that elected him in 2001 for Mark Green's Manhattan political base. Now the local candidates have taken note.
Take Dan Garodnick, the Democratic nominee for one East Side Council seat, who won his primarily handily and faces a Republican in November.
He hasn't endorsed Freddy. Encountered outside City Hall this morning, departing as a Ferrer rally got underway, he declined to say who he'd be voting for in November.
Garodnick did said he'll be a Councilman "who will stand with the Mayor when he's right and stand up to him when he is wrong."
Local GOP wins seem unlikely, given how much trouble Republicans have had picking up Council seats in the city lately...but could Freddy be a drag on the ticket for Manhattan Dems? read more »
Skullduggery
Here are a few favorites:
"While working for another candidate, I witnessed a Dan Garodnick poll worker steal the backpack of a Jack Lester poll worker in the Stanley Isaacs housing complex."
"Apparently a bunch of Crocker Snyder diehards(no pun intended) camped out in front of Morgy's house in the East 80's this morning to harass the poor fellow as he left the house for the day...classy." read more »
"Adriano Espaillat people are being physically removed by the police [from P.S. 128 on 169th and Audubon] for bullying voters and other campaign staffers."














