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CHANGING NYC: Bronx is changing, with artists leading way

CHANGING NYC: Bronx is changing, with artists leading way 

For decades, the Bronx had a bad reputation.

Howard Cosell intoned, “Ladies and gentleman, the Bronx is burning,” in 1977. Ten years later, Tom Wolfe picked the borough as the site of the hit-and-run accident that led to the downfall of rich, white bond trader Sherman McCoy in “The Bonfire of the Vanities.”

Over the years redevelopment has proceeded in fits and starts, with the Bronx often hailed as the next hot area.

It hasn’t quite happened yet _ the Bronx still has too many vacant lots and auto-body shops to be a yuppie paradise _ but many Bronx neighborhoods are undergoing a significant transformation.

Chains like Starbucks and the New York Sports Club are setting up shop, and underused industrial buildings are being redeveloped as shopping malls.

As in other places that have gone from gritty to trendy _ like Manhattan’s SoHo or the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn _ artists are in the vanguard.

Sculptor Linda Cunningham moved to the Bronx in 2000 and bought a five-story industrial building with two partners. She has redeveloped it into condos, part of a trend toward market-rate housing in areas where there had been nothing but government-subsidized rental units.

“I got in here because I was urgent to find a studio,” said Cunningham. “I was driven out by escalating rents everywhere.”

Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrion said more than $925 million in public and private money was invested in housing in the borough in 2007 _ up from about $237 million in 2002.

And while the nationwide economic downturn has slowed housing growth in 2008, U.S. Census figures show that the Bronx is less affected than the city as a whole.

The number of building permits filed in the city for individual apartments and for entire buildings in the first quarter of 2008 was about half of what it was in the same period last year.

In the Bronx, the figure was down just 17 percent from the prior year, from 1,037 to 862. By comparison, the number in Manhattan was down 69 percent.

And Bronx growth is not restricted to housing. The New York Yankees, who once threatened to leave for greener pastures, are instead building a new $1.3 billion stadium next to their old one, and they have pledged $800,000 a year to Bronx community groups.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced last month that the city has chosen a developer for the Kingsbridge Armory, a nine-story red-brick castle in the West Bronx that will become a mall called the Shops at the Armory.

Then there’s the fortress-like brick complex called the American Bank Note Building in the Hunt’s Point section, a landmark 1909 structure where bank notes were once printed.

Developers bought it for $32 million and plan to renovate it into offices for arts organizations, design firms and nonprofit groups, along with a retail food market.

Eight years after Cunningham and her partners bought their building in Mott Haven _ just 20 minutes by subway from midtown Manhattan _ the condo conversion has been completed and all but one of the 13 units have been sold.

Prices range from $395,000 to $795,000 _ still a bargain compared to Manhattan, where the average sale price for a co-op or condo was $1.6 million for the first quarter of 2008.

One lingering question is whether gritty Bronx neighborhoods can be fixed up without existing residents, businesses and nonprofit groups being forced out.

Of New York’s 8 million people, 1.3 million live in the Bronx. The borough’s population is largely black and Hispanic, and the poverty rate remains high.

According to Census figures, 28.9 of Bronx households were below the poverty line in 2005. The median household income was $29,331.

“We are experiencing a certain amount of gentrification,” said Carol Zakaluk, a lifelong Bronx resident who is a grant writer for a gallery. But Zakaluk said there are 11 housing projects in the area where she lives “and they’re not going anywhere.”

She envisions a future where people of all classes live side by side. “It’s got to be a little bit of each,” she said. “That’s my hope anyway.”

Whether that can happen remains to be seen.

The developers of the American Bank Note Building, henceforth to be called the BankNote, have said they expect the renovated project to rent for at least $20 per square foot. In Manhattan the average is $65 per square foot.

“We believe that if we create the right product and bring the right people there, it will help transform the area,” said Charles Bendit, co-chief executive of Taconic Investment Partners, which is developing the property with Denham Wolf Real Estate Services.

But the building’s current tenants will see their rents double, and some have left. A homeless drop-in center called the Living Room will soon be homeless itself.

“They’re saying they want us to leave in August,” said Carolyn McLaughlin, whose organization runs the Living Room.

A choreographer who goes by the single name Pepper is also shopping for a new home.

Pepper said her $450 monthly rent at the BankNote was slated to go up to $2,000 within 18 months. She is using temporary office space elsewhere and has put her costumes in storage.

Pepper is not happy about being displaced after she helped to build the Bronx arts scene that the BankNote developers are investing in.

“Who created that buzz?” she said. “The artists did it, not the landlords.”

SOURCE: NewsDay.com

 

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City controller’s report blasts Bronx school overcrowding, lack of relief

City controller’s report blasts Bronx school overcrowding, lack of relief

Bronx schools are bursting at the seams and “flawed” planning is to blame, a new report by the city controller’s office charges.

“There are too many neighborhoods with overcrowded schools, elementary schools in particular, and no relief for years to come,” Controller William Thompson said in releasing the report.

The report compares the new seats provided in the city Department of Education’s 2005-09 Capital Plan with expected neighborhood population growth.

The study highlights several Bronx neighborhoods, including Soundview-Castle Hill, Throgs Neck and Highbridge, where activists have been advocating for a new middle school.

In District 10 in the northwest Bronx, Thompson’s report charges that “schools were over capacity in virtually every CSD 10 neighborhood.”

That finding mirrors the calls of local activists who have been pushing to include two new schools in the Kingsbridge Armory redevelopment project.

The DOE, however, has said it sees no need for new schools in the area.

Its 2005-09 capital plan provides for 36,500 new elementary and middle school seats in new school buildings or additions to relieve overcrowding.

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Bronx Residents’ Crime, Safety Concerns Lead Quality of Life Survey

Bronx Residents’ Crime, Safety Concerns Lead Quality of Life Survey

A citywide survey has everyone raving about their ‘hoods, but Bronxites are apparently not so happy in theirs - when it comes to crime and safety.

The quality of life survey by the Citizens Committee for New York City found issues Bronx residents also rated as most important - but of the lowest quality - were clean sidewalks, streets and open spaces; clean air; public officials’ responsiveness to neighborhood needs; quiet neighborhoods and good public schools.

They were most satisfied with proximity to public transportation as well as shops, restaurants, parks and playgrounds. They were also happy with the borough’s diversity and having neighbors they get along with.

The survey questioned 340 Bronxites. While statistically a low sample, the Citizens Committee said it sought a broad range of respondents - in parks, on street corners, outside the Bronx Public Library and on the Grand Concourse.

“I think it is significant that everywhere else in the city beside the Bronx considers their neighborhoods relatively safe,” said Jemilah Magnusson, spokeswoman for the Citizens Committee, a nonprofit group that promotes civic engagement. “Even if it is just perception.”

John Robert, district manager of Community Board 2 in Hunts Point-Longwood, said he thinks the results are representative.

“All of the outer boroughs suffer from the stepchild thing, but we’re maybe the third stepchild,” he said. “The Bronx is on the back burner.”

Residents elsewhere gave their boroughs a fair-to-excellent rating on safety. Bronxites gave the borough’s safety a lower rating of poor to good. Read more..

 

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Manhattanites Choose The Bronx

 Manhattanites Choose The Bronx

irsgraph.jpg

Now that the glory days of moving to Brooklyn after being priced out of Manhattan are all but gone, the question remains: where do Manhattanites move?

The above I.R.S. graph is based on net migration and shows a clear trend; while Staten Island seems to be a last resort for the priced-out set, The Bronx has attracted more Manhattanites than Brooklyn since the beginning of the decade.

From 2001 through 2006, over 23,380 Manhattanites relocated to the Bronx.

Every year, the Bronx led the three other outer boroughs in net gains of Manhattanites. That includes Brooklyn, traditionally perceived as the natural next stop in a priced-out Manhattanite’s real estate evolution.

Is it time to scan those Bronx real estate listings? Maybe not. Just last year, brokers seemed a bit concerned and disenchanted about the borough’s real estate bubble, one saying, “The North Bronx north of Fordham Road is overrated. To me it doesn’t make a difference if you are North or South Bronx, it is still low- to middle-income.”

Prices are still on the rise, however — in just one year (February 2007 to February 2008) condos in parts of The Bronx (”Riverdale, Parkchester and Spuyten Duyvil are the three most popular Bronx neighborhoods for home seekers in New York City”) went up 11%.

Before packing your bags, there could be a better borough for you; NYMag recently checked out Suburban Jungle Realty, which is like a dating service but for homeowners and cities — will you and The Bronx fall in love?

SOURCE: Gothamist.com Read more..

 

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South Bronx communities benefit from public, private funds

amd_huntspt-park.jpg Hunts Point

amd_bx_hub.jpgGateway Center

amd_bx_parking.jpg The Hub

South Bronx communities benefit from public, private funds

Deputy Mayor Dan Doctoroff, in charge of the city’s economic development, looks at Bronx neighborhoods as a model for economic development and change.

“This amount of development and growth is absolutely unprecedented in the recent history of the Bronx,” says Doctoroff. “It shows how city-inspired public programs like improving streets, building parks, monitoring zoning and increasing transportation options can create the kind of conditions where private investment can flourish.”

Pointing at the new Metro-North station and the increase in retail for the GatewayCenter by the old Bronx Terminal Market, Doctoroff says it’s the job of city government to create environments that encourage the private market (meaning companies that operate for profit) to invest in the community. Here’s how and where that policy has impacted the South Bronx.
Gateway Center

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