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Bronx Courthouse Problems Are “Crystal Clear”

Bronx Courthouse Problems Are “Crystal Clear” 

The recently opened Bronx County Hall of Justice may be an “architect’s dream,” but the $421-million design marvel that made its debut two years behind schedule is giving its workers and visitors nagging headaches.

The glass building doesn’t have enough private booths for attorney-client conferences in either the area designated for the Department of Correction, where prisoners are temporarily held, or in the courtrooms.

One of the courthouse’s main entrance doors is boarded up after its glass facade was shattered by a strong wind shortly after the courthouse opened on Jan. 28.

Two of its staircases and a parking garage are closed because of safety issues, there was a leak in the jury room and attorneys sometimes have to hoof it the entire length of the courthouse — the equivalent of two city blocks — between courtrooms.

“This building is an architect’s dream,” said Giovanni Rosania, 26, a defense attorney in the Bronx, “but it’s not a practical contribution.”

Designed by Rafael Viñoly Architects, the 775,000-square-foot courthouse, which extends over two city blocks, was supposed to open in 2005 at a cost of around $300 million.

Two years and an additional $121 million later, the courthouse and its 47 courtrooms are now open, but a lot of work remains to be done.

“The building as designed and constructed is state-of-the-art and meets the needs of the criminal justice system as well as those of the immediate Bronx community,” Jay Bargmann, the firm’s senior vice president, said in a statement sent to a reporter Friday.

A large public plaza with a garage beneath it both remain closed due to safety concerns. Recent published reports have said that inspectors deemed the two-level, 240-space subterranean garage unsafe after they discovered that its ceiling was sagging.

A rock garden and patio directly above the two-story jury assembly room also has been closed off to the public because of security concerns.

One court employee, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said there were reports of water leaking from the rock garden into the jurors’ room, nicknamed “Madison Square Garden” because of its dome-like resemblance to the famous arena. The leak has since been repaired, the court employee said.

A staircase close to the main entrance, between the second and third floors, has been closed, too, since the building’s opening because there is no protective barrier above the handrail, leaving an exposed space large enough for someone to accidentally fall two stories to the ground floor.

On the opposite side of the building, a staircase between the second and third floors has been closed since March 12, when a pane of glass mysteriously shattered, spraying shards of glass everywhere.

Near that broken glass, two cracks can be seen forming on the building’s glass facade.

Some defense attorneys seem at odds with the new courthouse. There’s the limited availability of interview booths — which some lawyers see as a cause for litigation.

The lone copy machine costs too much, they say, and then there’s that long, long walk between courtrooms.

“We’re going back and forth like yo-yos,” says Lynn Calvacca, 47, a private lawyer from Queens.

SOURCE: NewsDay.com

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Prison Locked Out of South Bronx Neighborhood

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Prison Locked Out of South Bronx Neighborhood 

Looks like no new jail for the South Bronx.

Well, maybe not.

No one seems to know for sure.

“My head is spinning trying to keep track of all this stuff,” said Miquela Craytor, deputy director of the group Sustainable South Bronx, which had sued to stop the project.

The New York City Economic Development Commission last week notified attorneys for Craytor’s environmental activist group that the city is no longer interested in building a $375 million, 2,000-inmate prison on 28 acres in the Oak Point section of the South Bronx.

The plans have been in the works for two years. Oak Point sits near Rikers Island.

City Department of Correction spokesman Stephen Morello said plans ground to a halt in part because “elected officials in the area made it clear that they did not support a jail at the Oak Point site.”

The Correction Department remains committed to building a jail, Morello said, to “increase the capacity of the city jail system by about 10%, house the people in our custody in a safe manner, and hold them in a facility close to the communities they come from and the courts they go to.”

Last year, Sustainable South Bronx penned a study that called for the creation of a $36 million “ecoindustrial park” on the Oak Point site that was to include a construction and demolition debris recycling plant as well as facilities for wood salvage and re-milling, plastics recycling and manufacturing, and processing glass powder for concrete and masonry blocks.

Craytor said several “green” companies contacted by Sustainable South Bronx had expressed interest in opening offices on the site.

The group has run a long campaign to clean up the South Bronx, which is home to several power stations, waste transfer stations and incinerators. The area has one of the worst asthma rates in the city.

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