Friday, August 21, 2009

Comment Of The Day: Community-Responsive Development

oo


Rick has left this comment on the post "Carroll Gardeners Urge NYC Planning Commission To Re-think R6A Zoning Pockets":

Just for the record, it's not a matter of being anti-development, but rather wanting development to be community-responsive and sensitive to the physical and historical context of a neighborhood. It's a historic, low-scale neighborhood, and building height, architecture and materials should maintain that character. City Planning did a great job in this process and we're very pleased at their collaborative spirit in working with the community.
The new zoning is what's known as "contextual zoning," and that's a positive, but there is a gap in the city's zoning policy: in the proposed zoning change, the Floor Area Ratio (FAR) jumps from 2.0 in the R6B zone to 3.0 in the R6A zone. There's nothing in between. That may sound like a technicality, but FAR is a core element of the calculation for density and height, and that jump will have a very tangible impact on these streets. In addition to risking new buildings of up to 70 feet tall, it opens the door for the kind of out-of-context additions that are increasingly common. Walk the streets and you'll see some examples. Perhaps there's a viable mid-point between 2.0 and 3.0 that would be closer to the current context and not overly impinge on an owner's flexibility.
That's one scenario. Another scenario is landmarking (a lengthy process that is under the purview of the Landmarks Commission rather than City Planning), or perhaps City Planning can come up with other approaches that strike this balance. Public policy is supposed to be responsive to the public, and in this case the public is expressing the need for a relatively modest change in the existing policy. Somehow, that doesn't seem like an unreasonable request.


For Home Page, click Pardon Me For Asking

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I think iits nice that most of the speakers at the City planning commision thanks our Councilman Bill D. for all of his help. It was his support of Billy Stein's building at 360 smith St force the community to come together for this contextual rezoning. And for this he is truely to be thanked. But lets be real our councilman is to busy running for his next position to canre about making/recommending any changes in zoning that would close the current R6A vs R6B gap. We can no longer depend on our electeds. We must do this ourselves. We must not wait for others. We have shown what a community can do. Lets not sit still, let keep moving