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Mill Pond Park in the Bronx Named Feb Park Of The Month

Mill Pond Park in the Bronx has been named February’s Park of the Month. The ten-acre park opened last October as part of the Yankee Stadium Redevelopment Project, and the upcoming arrival of spring and the warm weather season offers fresh opportunities to discover nature, connect with the community, and have fun outdoors. Hugging the banks of the Harlem River, Mill Pond Park has transformed a formerly run-down industrial section of the south Bronx into a state-of-the-art recreational facility. The park is located along East 149th Street and Exterior Street, across the street from the Gateway Center at Bronx Terminal Market.

“Mill Pond Park is a creatively designed, exciting new park that brings increased green space and waterfront access to the South Bronx,” said Commissioner Adrian Benepe. “The park’s state of the art tennis courts, esplanade, picnic area, and youth sand play area offer various ways to have fun and connect with nature. Mill Pond Park is a great place to get out, workout, and eat out right on the Harlem River waterfront.”

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Yankees train station opens May 23, walkway this weekend

It won’t be ready for the Yankees’ home opener on April 16, but Metro-North Railroad plans to open its station at Yankee Stadium about a month later, on May 23, the railroad announced yesterday.Bronx Bombers fans from the suburbs will first be able to ride Metro-North to a Saturday game against Philadelphia.

“They will have direct, fast, convenient and reliable service to Yankee games so that they don’t have to worry about traffic,” Metro-North President Howard Permut said yesterday, as he and other railroad officials showed the nearly complete stop to the media. “It will be much more comfortable. We think it will be basically a home run for the people of Westchester and Connecticut.” Read more..

 

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Buildings sprang up as donations rained down on Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrion

 Bronx Boro President Adolfo Carrion on the roof of the Bronx Courthouse with the old and the new Yankee Stadium behind him.

 The man who is President Obama’s newly minted urban czar pocketed thousands of dollars in campaign cash from city developers whose projects he approved or funded with taxpayers’ money, a Daily News probe found.

Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrion often received contributions just before or after he sponsored money for projects or approved important zoning changes, records show.

Most donations were organized and well-timed. Read more..

 

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New Yankee Stadium puts up championship numbers for the Bronx

The Bronx is witnessing a period of remarkable economic revitalization.

From the Gateway Center at Bronx Terminal Market to the Mayor’s initiative to spur investment in the South Bronx, the past couple of years have brought unprecedented development to the borough.

Yankee Stadium is part of this historic rejuvenation.

Unfortunately, the extensive benefits of the stadium project to the people of the Bronx and to the city have been overlooked or not reported at all.
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Even a cursory examination of these benefits, though, demonstrates why the city committed to this project in the first place. It’s time to set the record straight.

Like the Yankees’ 26 world championships, the stats on this project are staggering.

- More than 6,000 mostly unionized construction jobs, with a quarter of the man-hours performed by Bronx residents.

- More than 1,000 new, mostly unionized permanent jobs. New and expanded park space.

- New parking garages that take cars off congested streets.

- A new Metro-North station.

- Plus, $40million in new tax revenue for the city, according to the analysis done when the project was approved. And the list goes on.

Nobody in his or her right mind would criticize these benefits. Read more..

 

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Retail, office development finally gets off ground in South Bronx

Retail, office development finally gets off ground in South Bronx

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Shoppers crowd the Hub retail district, where Harris Stores, below, sells 300 items a day from its 99-cent sidewalk rack.

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The South Bronx

site had sat empty since a mayoral groundbreaking ceremony.

The mayor was Abe Beame, and the year was 1976. The ceremony marked the first of three decades of false starts in a slice of the city that had more than its share of undelivered promises.

But finally, last year, megadeveloper Stephen Ross built a two-story retail and office building at Third Ave. and E. 156th St., and renovated the parking garage next door.

Shoppers in the neighborhood known as the Hub said they like what his firm, the Related Cos., delivered.

Yonarys Ramos runs errands at the building’s Rite Aid on her way home from work in the admissions office of Boricua College because the drugstore stays open until 9 p.m.

Ramos, who has four kids, gets school supplies at its Staples. And she thinks the prices are right at its Nine West outlet store — her cousin bought a purse there for just $5.

“I hope they build more stores,” said Ramos, 31.

She’ll get her wish if Related becomes a joint-venture partner with Blackacre Capital and Cypress Equities in a massive development planned nearby at a nearly empty, six-acre site at E. 149th St. and Bergen and Brook Aves.

Related wants in on the proposed 1.1 million-square-foot project, called the Plaza at the Hub. Before getting involved, the developer is asking the Bloomberg administration to move a city agency into an office building that would be part of the project, sources said.

Also, Related is seeking changes in the development plan, for instance, to include more housing. The current design calls for up to 250 apartments, 375,000 square feet of shops, a large supermarket, a 14-screen movie theater and about 1,000 parking spots.

Officials at the city Economic Development Corp. and execs at Related — which built the ritzy Time Warner Center and is now constructing the Gateway Center mall at the former Bronx Terminal Market — wouldn’t discuss the proposed project. Regarding the Third Ave. project, Glenn Goldstein, the president of Related’s retail division, did say he’s in “advanced negotiations” with a casual restaurant about renting the last vacant space, on the ground floor of the garage.

While development officials were reticent, real estate brokers were eager to talk about changes the proposed Plaza at the Hub project would bring.

“A regional-tenanted corridor would get an opportunity to have lots of national tenants — and parking spaces, so people would come in by car,” said broker Steve Lorenzo of NAI Friedland Realty. “It would bring the Targets of the world to the Hub and make it a place for 21st-century shoppers.”

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