Carl Weisbrod

The Pope of Hudson Square

The Three Kings.
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The Three Kings.

Trinity Church had a problem.  read more »

Downtown Buzz

“Guess what? The Lower Manhattan Development Corporation just gave away $28 million to all sorts of groovy cultural groups downtown. They are really going to make that neighborhood exciting.”

“Oh, yeah. Let me guess. Was the Tribeca Film Institute one of them?”  read more »

“Uh, yeah. How’d you know?”

C.B.A.’s: Coming to a Bar Near You

Community benefits agreements—contracts between real estate developers and grassroots organizations to provide jobs or housing for local residents—are popping up all over without anyone much agreeing what they are and what they should and can do. Aside from a handbook published last May by some of the people who created the first C.B.A.’s in California (PDF), there has not been much, and yet these agreements are becoming part of the fabric of real estate development in this city.

In March, the New York City Bar will hold a panel discussion on the topic March 13 at the association’s headquarters, 42 W. 44th St. Entitled “Community Benefits Agreements: Who is the Community and What is the Benefit?” and sponsored by the association’s land use, planning and zoning committee, the panel will include City Council Member Melinda Katz; Joshua Sirefman, Deputy Mayor Dan Doctoroff’s chief of staff; Carl Weisbrod, former president of the city Economic Development Corporation; and Brad Lander, executive director of the Pratt Institute Center for Community and Environmental Development.

It turns out that the bar association tackled C.B.A.’s once before. In a report to Mayor Ed Koch in June 1988, the bar association recommended the developers only be required to provide improvements that were included in the zoning code (such as building a subway entrance in order to get a density bonus) or that would mitigate environmental disruption that the project would cause (such as traffic).

The report concentrated on the role of government, and less on community groups striking their own deals with developers. And back then these improvements were called “amenities” and had less to do with jobs—today’s hot topic in Brooklyn's Atlantic Yards, the Gateway Mall in the Bronx, and Columbia University's expansion in Harlem—and more to do with parks or senior housing. But throughout the 44-page report (included in “The Record of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York,” Vol. 43, No. 6), the bar association committee strikes notes that resonate today. Here's a sample:  read more »

The ad hoc payment of money or services in return for favorable governmental action also adversely affects the decision-making process. In egregious cases, the decision maker is corrupted. In less egregious cases, satisfying the wish list for a borough president, community board or a mayor enhances the recipient’s political power. The decision-maker may accept the project in order to get the unrelated amenities, when perhaps it should be voted down. Thus integrity is eroded, of the government in general and of the zoning laws and land use regulations in particular.
-Matthew Schuerman

The New Weisbrod

No, not Iris Weinshall, as once widely rumored. The new head of the Alliance for Downtown New York, the largest business improvement district in the city, is Eric J. Deutsch, the president and CEO of the Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation, the Alliance announced today. The spot’s been open since July 1, when Carl Weisbrod left to take charge of Trinity Church’s extensive real estate holdings. There is a Chuck Schumer connection, however. Deutsch was once executive director of the Group of 35, an ad hoc committee on commercial space formed by Schumer, city transportation commissioner Weinshall's husband.
 read more »

The (Church) Bell Tolls

Talk about downtown office vacancies! Carl Weisbrod starts his new job as executive vice president for real estate, at downtown land moguls Trinity Church, on Monday, leaving headless the Alliance for Downtown New York, the largest business improvement district in the country.

An alliance spokesman assures The Real Estate that a search committee has been working "in earnest" since the hire was announced in May. In the meantime, William Bernstein is interim chief. (Weisbrod is shown here with London mayor Ken Livingstone back in 2001.)  read more »

- Matthew Schuerman

Last of the Empire Builders

Mixed-use development projects have become part of New York's cityscape in recent years.  read more »

Dazzled by Times Square, Nasdaq Boss Frank Zarb May Snub Wall Street

Most stiff-collared financial industry executives would probably be put off by Times Square's garish  read more »