Monday, October 20, 2008
Norwood Petition: Residents Sign for Contextual Zoning
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Save Your Neighborhood! Keep Norwood a Liviable Neighborhood!
Norwood Neighborhood Association, home owners and residents of Norwood Gardens Astoria community, are urging their elected officials, The NYC Planning Commission and Members of Community Board #1 to support their petition for contextual downzoning from R6 to R4B ; a zone that more accurately reflects our residential neighborhood of one and two family homes.
Wouldn't it be nice if developers enhanced our community rather that blighted it with outsized construction blocking light, paving over gardens and putting in new structures that are not reflective of the community at large? Should preserving green spaces, becoming more valuable to residents each day, be something developers should consider in their building plans? How do you feel about front gardens and green spaces being paved over and replaced by cement parking slabs with cars and trash cans? It's happening all over Queens, because developers and our elected officials don't realize we care! Support Norwood Gardens R4B contextual downzoning petition to show you want to protect your neighborhood and care about your community! Write or call elected officials or call 311 and let them know downzoning matters to you!
Top photo: 4-5 family apartment building replaced one family home in the midst of historically significant block. R6 zoning permits this.
Bottom photo: 2 family home was torn down and a 4 story commercial medical facility is under construction. Did the DOB really approve plans to build all the way out to the service road, right up to the construction fence ? Resident drivers and pedestrians are finding this dangerous as it's impossible to see incoming cars and people. Access is also difficult for sanitation trucks that service all the homes on both 36th and 37th Streets.
This is what's happening in your backyard!
Top 2 photos: 37th Street between 31st Avenue and 30th Avenue.
Top 3rd Photo: 38th Street between 31st Avenue and 30th Avenue
Top bottom photo: Paved front yard with parking lot: trend in Queens. R4B does not allow this.
Bottom photos: 38th Street between 31st Avenue and 30th Avenue
Aclotramizole ointment LeSpeak out! Let your elected officials know you care about your neighborhood and how inappropriate development is impacting your life: traffic congestion, over crowded schools, pollution from idling cars and trucks, no parking, electrical outages, not enough parks or green spaces (and overcrowding in the 1 we have on 38th Street), front gardens paved for parking, trash build-up, lack of dog runs. But there are lots more multi-family apartment buildings overloading an aging infrastructure! From a webpage at NYC Department of City Planning : example of R6 Zoning |
• R6 zoning replaces the R5 and C8-1 districts on Northern Boulevard where, when combined with commercial overlays, it will foster apartment buildings with ground floor retail. R6 zoning is retained on Roosevelt Avenue at the southwest corner of the rezoning area and along its eastern boundary on 114th Street. When developed using the height factor regulations, R6 zoning allows a building height of 11 to 13 stories at a maximum 2.43 FAR with required building setbacks. This high-rise alternative offers development opportunities for Astoria Boulevard where views of Flushing Bay can be maximized. |
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Contectual Zoning for Livable Community in Norwood Gardens!
If you value your neighborhood, green spaces, low density living and would like to encourage development that enhances rather than destroys your neighborhood, let your elected officials and the NYC planning board know YOU CARE; sign the Norwood Gardens downzoning petition. Say no to R6 (buildings 12 stories and higher, curb cuts, front yard parking lots and high density living, drain on limited public services and resources) and Yes to R4B (no curb cuts to make way for parking in front yards, more green, less height, more light, and a neighborhood that is not an anonymous block of ugly apartments buildings built by developers who have no stake in Astoria).