Manhattan Express - June 13, 2019

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V isit us online a t w w w. M anha t t an E x pr e s s .co m

MIDTOWN, UPPER EAST & WEST SIDES

VOLUME 5, NUMBER 11

JUNE 13 – JUNE 26, 2019

BIKE-LANE BATTLES ADVOCATES PUSH FOR PROTECTED LANES ALONG C.P.W. AND AT 79TH ST. ROTUNDA Pages 6 & 8

C yclists take their chances in traffic at the 79th St. Rotunda in Riverside Park, above and left.

PHOTOS BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

We've Got the Power!

1 M E T R O T E C H • N YC 112 0 1 • © 2 0 19 S C H N E P S M E D I A


Older New Yorkers Demand (and Need) Rent Reforms 9P D8I@CPE D:D@:?8<C# ;<9I8 IF9C<J 8E; 9<K? =@EB<C No one needs more convincing that living in New York City is expensive – especially when it comes to rent. We need to do something about it, and with current rent laws about to expire, now’s the time. Older New Yorkers may know better than anyone about the struggles and worries of rising rent costs. Many live on fixed incomes and face escalating expenses for health care, utilities and food, while many pay for costs to care for loved ones. Our older residents are often one health or family crisis away from breaking the bank. As it is, a study by the Center for an Urban Future commissioned by AARP found that one in five older New Yorkers is living in poverty – up 11 percent during the past decade. And the number of New York City residents aged 65

regulated units to market rate apartments or game the system - at the expense of tenants - for their own financial gain. Many older New Yorkers already report having trouble paying their rent; 54% of city voters ages 50-plus – including 67% of Hispanics - said affordable housing was a major concern, according to a 2014 AARP survey - far surpassing other concerns. As the City’s population 88IG mfclek\\i ;\YiX IfYc\j k\jk`Ô\j fe i\ek cXnj Xk X E\n Pfib continues to age, affordable JkXk\ J\eXk\ glYc`Z _\Xi`e^ `e 8cYXep cXjk dfek_% housing concerns are likely and over grew twelve times Their friendships and to grow. We need to ensure faster than the city’s un- support systems, shop own- safe, quality and affordable der-65 population over the ers and pharmacists, and housing for older New Yorkpast decade, with a record their doctors are in the ers now and in the future. A 1.24 million adults aged 65 community. They attend strong rent-regulated housand over now living in the local senior centers for all- ing program is essential to five boroughs. important socialization this goal. Over two million One source of stability – and often meals. They households in NYC live in – and comfort – for many have routines crucial to rental housing and over older New Yorkers is their people as they age. one million households live home and their community. But seniors face the in rent-regulated or rentIt’s not unusual for seniors risk of losing their apart- controlled apartments. to live in their apartment ments to rising rent costs. We need to ensure more and community for 20, 30, Current loopholes allow than the renewal of existeven 40 years or more. landlords to convert rent ing state rent laws; we need

the Governor and state legislature to work together to enact comprehensive reforms. AARP supports three basic principles: ending high-rent vacancy decontrol, restoring preferential rent protections, and ensuring the Vacancy Allowance, Major Capital Improvements and Individual Apartment Improvements initiatives protect tenants while allowing landlords to address problems. This is our opportunity to ensure that New York does not lose affordable housing options for our seniors – and all our residents. The seniors who have built our communities deserve as much. Marilyn McMichael and Debra Robles have lived in their same rent regulated apartments in New York City for 30 and 20 years, respectively, and are active AARP advocates for rent reforms. Beth Finkel is AARP New York State Director.

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FILE PHOTO

A passenger exiting a helicopter at the W. 30th St. Helipor t, where business and commuter flights are still allowed.

Maloney: Ban ‘nonessential’ ’copter flights BY LINCOLN ANDERSON

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ollowing Monday’s fatal helicopter crash onto the roof of the AXA Equitable building in Midtown, Carolyn Maloney, who represents the area in Congress, renewed her call to ban nonessential helicopter flights from Manhattan. Flying in heavy fog and rain, the pilot, identified as Tim McCormack, 58, reportedly tried to make an emergency crash-landing on top of the skyscraper, at 787 Seventh Ave., between W. 51st and W. 52nd Sts., which lacks a helipad. McCormack, who was the only passenger, died as the ’copter blew into pieces and sparked a two-alarm fire. According to the New York Post, the pilot had lifted off from the E. 34th St. Heliport, after having dropped off his passenger, and was en route back to his “home port” in Linden, N.J. He flew down the East Side and then back up the Hudson River — but apparently got lost in the low-visibility conditions and wound up over Midtown. News helicopters reportedly were told the cloud ceiling — 900 feet — was too low to fly. Visibility at the time of the crash was less than 1 mile beSchneps Media

cause of heavy fog. Eyewitness News said the helicopter was being used for “executive travel.” “Today, New York City experienced yet another deadly helicopter crash, this time, with our nightmare of having a helicopter crash into a building,” Maloney said. “The pilot was killed and no one else was seriously injured — but this pilot’s death is one too many. We cannot rely on good fortune to protect people on the ground. It is past time for the F.A.A. to ban unnecessary helicopters from the skies over our densely packed urban city. The risks to New Yorkers are just too high.” In March 2018, Maloney and Congressmember Jerrold Nadler led a group of their New York and New Jersey colleagues in voicing their continued opposition to helicopter tourism in light of the March 11, 2018, helicopter crash in the East River that killed five passengers. New York banned helicopters from landing on rooftops following a 1977 crash into the Pan Am Building, now called the Met Life Building.

COURTESY CNBC

The fatal helicopter crash on top of the A X A Equitable building in Midtown sparked a t wo-alarm fire. MEX

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Police Blotter other guy was getting too close to him. According to police, the younger man said he did not move toward the man once underneath the scaffolding. But the 37-year-old then punched the 27-yearold in the face, leaving him bruised, and walked away shortly before police arrived at the scene.

19th Precinct What a gas A Bronx man’s cell phone was stolen while he put air in his car’s tires at a Shell gas station, police said. On May 24, around 10:20 a.m. the 53-yearold pulled into the station at the southwest corner of First Ave. and E. 96th St. After filling his tires with air, the man re-entered his car to make a call on his $1,149 iPhone 10, but couldn’t find it. According to police, the man asked the manager to review the gas station’s security footage to see if anyone had grabbed the phone out of the car while he filled the tires. Footage, indeed, showed a man swiping the pricey phone along with $8 cash from the car through a window the driver had left open.

Police say they want to question this guy about public lewdness in the subway system.

Rotten ‘Apple’

member anyone asking him questions about it before he went to exercise.

Another Upper East Sider recently fell victim to a phone scam, according to police. On May 25, a 63-year-old woman received a call from “Apple” offering free security software. The victim was told that for “Apple” to install the software, she had to purchase two $2,000 gift cards. She quickly did so after the caller said the money would be refunded. The, realizing she had been duped, notified police on May 31.

Gym robbery A guy working out at the New York Sports Club at 502 Park Ave., at E. 59th St., had his belongings stolen, police said. On May 24, the 30-year-old placed his wallet in one of the gym’s lockers and secured it with a lock before working out. After leaving the gym, he checked his wallet and noticed a few things missing, including $80 cash and a U.S. Bank credit card. He quickly learned that the card had been used for purchases at nearby stores. According to cops, the lock on the locker showed no signs of being tampered with and the victim did not re-

20th Precinct

72nd St. The woman realized her wallet had been stolen at the cash register when she searched inside her purse and could not find it. The $100 Woren leather wallet had an American Express Platinum card, a Chase Visa card, a senior citizen bus pass, a Medicare card, an AARP United Health card, a New York State driver’s license, $100 in cash and an Allied Board of Trade card.

Bad Apples Scanner stolen A FreshDirect driver had his scanner stolen while he was on his lunch break, according to cops. On Fri., May 24, at 12:25 p.m., the driver parked at the northwest corner of Columbus Ave. and W. 69th St. He set his scanner on the ground and returned to the truck to grab his lunch. When he went back to pick up the $1,500 scanner, it was gone.

COURTESY N.Y.P.D.

66th St. sleaze Police said that on Sun., April 28, around 3:45 p.m., a 64-year-old woman was on the platform at the 66th St./ Broadway subway station, when she noticed a man rubbing his private area in public view. The guy then fled in an unknown direction. The person wanted for questioning is described as a male with a shaved head, 50 to 60 years old, 5 feet 6 inches tall and weighing 160 pounds, last seen wearing a black jacket, blue jeans and white sneakers. Anyone with information is asked to call the Crime Stoppers Hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) or for Spanish, 1-888-57-PISTA (74782). Tips can also be submitted on the CrimeStoppers Web site at www.nypdcrimestoppers. com, on Twitter @NYPDTips or by texting to 274637 (CRIMES) and then entering TIP577.

Bike-by grab A man had nearly $7,000 worth of his stuff stolen after his gym bag was snatched at a bus stop. According to police, on June 3, at 10:02 a.m., a 34-year-old man was waiting at a bus stop at the northeast corner of Second Ave. and E. 79th St. when a man on a blue bike rode by and took his gym bag, which he had set on the ground beside him. The bag had a $600 black Lenovo ThinkPad laptop,a $6,000 Mikimoto white pearl necklace, a $150 pair of blue jeans, a $120 pair of brown shoes, a $50 button-down shirt and a black nylon IWC Pilot watch strap.

Rain pain Police arrested a man after he punched a person in the face for getting too close to him, according to a report. On May 29, at 6:42 p.m., a 27-yearold man stood underneath scaffolding at the corner of Madison Ave. and E. 83rd St. to escape a rain shower. But a 37-year-old man, who was underneath the scaffolding for the exact same reason, began shouting that the

Wallet nabbed An elderly woman had her wallet stolen while shopping at Trader Joe’s, police said. On May 22, at 12:23 p.m., the 81year-old left her purse unattended in her cart for “just a few minutes” while she shopped at the popular chain grocery store at 2073 Broadway, at W.

Police are looking for two 25-yearolds wanted for stealing electronics from the Apple Store at 1981 Broadway, at W. 67th St. On May 24, at 7:02 p.m., the two young men reportedly starting taking merchandise off the shelves and placing it into a backpack. According to police, the pair took four Apple Magic Trackpad 2s worth $596, two Apple Magic Trackpad 2s worth $258 and two Apple Magic Mouses worth $158.

Bag trap An unlucky woman was arrested after police caught her stealing from a purse that was planted at the Trader Joe’s at 2073 Broadway, at W. 72nd St., as part of Operation Lucky Bag. The much-debated ruse, in which officers plant property to trap a passerby into an arrest, was used at the grocery store on May 24. According to police, at 12:23 p.m. the woman walked around the grocery store without making a purchase, then picked the wallet out of the unattended purse, removed the $40 of cash from it, and discarded the wallet. Police then arrested her once she exited the place. In addition to fi nding the cash on her, officers also found an expired MetroCard that had been altered to give unlimited swipes.

Rolex removed A man had his pricey watch stolen while working out at the gym. On May 23, at 11:20 a.m., the 36-year-old victim stored his $12,000 Rolex in a locker before working out at the Equinox gym at 160 Columbus Ave., at W. 67th St. When he returned to the locker, the watch was gone.

Alejandra O’Connell-Domenech

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C.B. 7 committee green lights C.P.W. bike lane BY ALEJANDR A O’CONNELLDOMENECH

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he Transportation Committee of the Upper West Side’s Community Board 7 approved a proposed northbound protected bike lane along Central Park West on June 10. The Department of Transportation’s proposed bike lane would run north from W. 59th St. to W. 110th St. The plan would require the removal of 400 parking spaces along the eastern side of the avenue. The bike lane would be painted, bordered by the curb on its right, as well as by physical barriers separating it from traffic by 7 feet. “This is a great step in the right direction,” said Howard Yaruss, C.B. 7 Transportation Committee chairperson After Madison Jane Lyden, a 23-yearold Australian tourist, died after being forced to swerve her bike into oncoming traffic along the avenue in 2018, Upper West Siders, bicycle safety activists, C.B. 7 and local elected officials, including Assemblymember Richard Gottfried and Councilmember Helen Rosenthal, called on D.O.T. to create a two-way protected bike lane. But D.O.T. Manhattan Borough Commission Edward Pincar; Director of Bicycle and Greenway Programs Ted Wright; and Senior Project Manager at the Bicycle and Greenway Program Nick Carey said that a southbound lane was not feasible. According to Wright, anticipating the movements of southbound cyclists in a second lane would be “too counterintuitive” for southbound drivers waiting for gaps in between northbound cars, bicycles and pedestrians in order to make lefthand turns. Designing a southbound lane that would also need to accommodate the 22 northbound bus stops along Central Park West would also be a challenging. Attendees at the packed committee at the chapel in Congregation Rodeph Sholom were divided. “There aren’t enough people using bikes to justify inconveniencing everyone,” said Upper West Sider Fern Arden. The 84th St. and Central Park West resident complained that traffic has worsened on neighboring Columbus Ave. since a southbound bike lane was installed 2010. She did not want to see the same thing happen on another major traffic vein. Other opponents were concerned about a cut to scarce parking space. According an October 2018 count by D.O.T., 1,310 cyclists passed W. 66th St. and 1,540 passed W. 86th St. within a 12-hour period, qualifying Central Park West as a heavily used bike route. At the meeting, D.O.T representatives added that two-thirds of the cyclists counted were heading northbound. According to D.O.T data, between

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PHOTO BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

Reed Rubey, from Streetopia, held a photo of Madison Jane Lyden, 23, killed by a garbage truck on C.P.W.

COURTESY DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

A design rendering of Central Park West with and without the proposed protected lane.

2013 and 2017, a total of 22 cyclists and pedestrians were severely injured on Central Park West between W. 59th St. and W. 110th St. And a total of 95 pedestrians and 94 cyclists have received some sort of injury along the avenue, based on the data. A total of 40 people have either been severely injured, or killed, at 96th St. and Central

Park West. Those in support of the bike lanes, were moved to do so to decrease the number injuries and stop another tragic death like Lyden’s. “It’s not a matter of if there will be another Madison Lyden, it’s when” said Deputy Inspector Timothy Malin from the 20th Precinct, which responded to MEX

collision that killed the young Australian. The proposed bike lane plan will be voted on again at C.B. 7’s next fullboard meeting, in July. If the resolution passes, the earliest that D.O.T. could begin constructing the protected bike lane would be later this summer.

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Park Ave. to get ‘Ada’ by Katz, Rickey’s kinetics BY ALEJANDR A O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

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he Park Ave. Malls in the 50s blocks will be filled with interesting art — some of it gently shifting in the breeze — for three months starting later this summer, when the Parks Department honors two prolific, legendary American sculptors with installations. The work of Alex Katz and George Rickey will be displayed along the malls from mid-August through midNovember. Seven pieces on the planted medians between 50th and 57th Sts. will be 8-foot-tall replicas of Katz’s 2019 “cutout” sculpture “Departure (Ada),” a colorful porcelain enamel-and-steel image of his wife and longtime model Ada walking away.

In addition, a total of nine kinetic sculptures by Rickey will grace the malls between 52nd and 56th Sts. Rickey is regarded as one of the most inventive and influential sculptors of the 20th century, with a career spanning seven decades. Many of his sculptures are forms created with lines and simple shapes, like rectangles, trapezoids and cubes in stainless steel, and are designed to move when hit by air currents. The pieces on the malls will be stainless-steel replicas of sculptures created at different points throughout Rickey’s career and will range from 13 feet to 36 feet tall. This is not the first time the city has honored Ricky. In 2000, his work was featured on Park Ave. as the inaugural temporary public art installation by the Fund for Park Avenue’s Sculpture Advisory Committee.

This sculpture of Ada will be on the Park Ave. Malls between 52nd and 53rd Sts. later this summer.

A kinetic sculpture by George Rickey. The Park Ave. Malls will spot nine of the ar tist’s movable sculptures star ting later this summer.

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79th St. Rotunda bike plan called unsafe BY ALEJANDR A O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

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he Upper West Side’s Community Board 7 voted to reject the Department of Transportation’s $200-million redesign for the 79th St. Rotunda on the grounds that the plan is unsafe for cyclists and pedestrians. The Robert Moses-built multilevel structure, features an underground parking garage, a restaurant with outdoor seating and the roundabout. For years, cyclists have had to weave in and out of cars on the roundabout to access the Hudson River Greenway, one of the most used bike paths in the city. Along the sides of the rotunda are two sets of stairs and wooden ramps. Many less daring cyclists will use the ramps to reach the restaurant below the roundabout and then walk their bikes to the Greenway. The roundabout also serves as a turnaround for the M79 crosstown bus. In its resolution, the full board of C.B. 7 said D.O.T. should create a “physical protected separation” between drivers and cyclists in the traffic circle, increase signage and install “tactile warning treatments, such as PHOTO BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH rumble strips,” on the circle. the meeting considered the vote a win, In May, the community board votdespite the community board’s adviso- A c yclist navigates traffic on the 79th St. Rotunda on June 9. ed for the project with conditions, nory position — the thinking being that it tably that D.O.T. create a safe path for will force the D.O.T. to come back with cyclists wishing to use the top of the a safer scheme for cyclists. rotunda to access the Greenway. Cycling activists and community But after a contentious beginning to members developed several proposals, the June 7 meeting, the board decided including incorporating Jersey barrito change the semantics of their resoers, for alternate bike-path designs. But lution to say they now disapproved the D.O.T. has rejected each and repeatedly project, unless a number of modificapushed a painted bike lane only. tions are made to the redesign plan. “We are asking D.O.T. to return to Bicycling activists presthe drawing board and create someent at thing that is truly fabulous,” said Lisa Orman, director of

COURTESY DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

A rendering of the 79th St. Rotunda with the proposed painted bike lane.

PHOTO BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

Upper West Side resident Dan Glassman decided to take his bike underneath the 79th St. Rotunda to get to the Hudson River Greenway on June 9. Many c yclists take the ramps through the rotunda’s cafe to avoid biking through the traffic roundabout.

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Streetopia Upper West Side, who spoke against D.O.T.’s current plan. Orman, along with a handful of other bicycling activists, donned a black T-shirt with a large image of a skull to further drive home the point that fewer protected bike lanes mean more cyclist deaths. “A person is injured every two hours,” said Andrew Rosenthal, an activist present at the meeting, referring to city cyclists. “This is not the way it has to be.”

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Judge extends 2 Bridges stop-work BY ALEJANDR A O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

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New York Supreme Court judge extended a temporary restraining order to block developers from beginning work on three high-rise towers in The Lower East Side’s Two Bridges neighborhood. The ruling is a temporary win for advocacy groups, the City Council and Borough President Gale Brewer. The Post reported that Justice Arthur Engoron said on Wednesday, the city’s opinion seems to be: “We can do pretty much anything we want because zoning allows it. I just can’t believe that’s the case.” Brewer tweeted: “It’s hard to see how these projects can continue without public review. Totally agree!” The extension runs until Aug. 2, when Engoron will present a written decision on whether the planned 1,008-foot rental tower at 247 Cherry St. by JDS Developments; a planned 798-foot tower at 260 South St. by L+M Development and CIM Group; and a proposed 730-foot building at 259 Clinton St. by Starrett Corporation would require approval under the city’s Uniform Land Use Review Procedure, or ULURP, before starting construction. The neighborhood was formerly designated an Urban Renewal Area, where the city tried to improve living conditions by creating mixed-income housing and employment opportunities. In 1972, Two Bridges was designated a Large-Scale Residential Development, or L.S.R.D., area, under which the city is more lenient on normal land-use regulations in order to promote good site planning of large buildings that span multiple property lots. According to the city’s Environmental Impact State-

PHOTO BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

Marc Richardson, of Land’s End One Tenants A ssociation, also a member of TUFF-LES, was among the speakers at the Wed., June 5, protest against the Two Bridges tower projects.

ment for this current L.S.R.D. project, the towers would create more than 2,700 new residential units, 690 of those affordable. Of the affordable units, 200 would be for seniors. Critics say it is unclear how the affordability would be measured. The towers would also create 11,000 square feet of retail space. Opponents argue it was wrong for the City Planning Commission, last year, to O.K. a joint “minor modification” application on a special permit for the multi-building project, which allowed the towers to skirt going through a ULURP public review. Last December, two days after the towers got the

green light from City Planning, the City Council, under Speaker Corey Johnson, along with Borough President Brewer, filed a lawsuit in Manhattan State Supreme Court against the Department of City Planning, the City Planning Commission and Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration. Brewer and Johnson argued that the decision usurped the City Council’s power over land-use issues and that the development was nothing close to a “minor modification” to the existing neighborhood. Another opponent of the towers, Councilmember Margaret Chin, added that the project must go through ULURP because of the impact it would have on density and traffic, among other things, in the working-class neighborhood. In March, a collection of Lower East Side and Chinatown activist groups, including Lower East Side Neighbors, Chinese Staff and Workers Association, Youth Against Displacement and National Mobilization Against Sweatshops, along with local residents, filed another lawsuit demanding a complete stop of the towers, saying they would exacerbate gentrification. They also argued that the large-scale residential development designation does not exempt the towers from broader zoning laws regulating the impact they would have on light and air in the neighborhood. In March, a second lawsuit against the Two Bridges L.S.R.D. project was filed by another group of community organizations, including Tenants United Fighting for the Lower East Side (TUFF-LES), CAAAV: Organizing Asian Communities, Good Old Lower East Side (GOLES), Land’s End One Tenants Association, and LaGuardia Houses Tenants Association. That suit argues that the project’s approval should be annulled since the city did not follow the right process.

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his April 1970 photo shows when the Garibaldi statue in Washington Square Park was being moved as part of the park’s renovation. The monument, featuring a bronze statue on a granite pedestal, was moved about 15 feet east to allow construction of a promenade in the park, according to the Parks Department. During the relocation, a time capsule was discovered that had been placed when the monument was dedicated in 1888. The glass ves-

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VICTORIA SCHNEPS-YUNIS JOSHUA SCHNEPS LINCOLN ANDERSON GABE HERMAN MICHELE HERMAN BOB KRASNER TEQUILA MINSKY MARY REINHOLZ PAUL SCHINDLER JOHN NAPOLI MARCOS RAMOS CLIFFORD LUSTER (718) 260-2504 CLUSTER@CNGLOCAL.COM MARVIN ROCK GAYLE GREENBURG JIM STEELE JULIO TUMBACO ELIZABETH POLLY

sel contained several documents, including newspaper accounts of Italian nationalist Garibaldi’s death in 1882, a history of the Committee for the Monument of Garibaldi, and news clippings and a poster for the statue’s dedication. General Giuseppe Garibaldi (1807-82) fought for Italy’s unification in the mid-19th century. The statue’s sculptor, Giovanni Turini, was a volunteer member of Garibaldi’s Fourth Regiment during an 1866 war between Italy and Austria. — Gabe Herman

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Letters to the Editor

Take the pressure off Pr. 40 and park BY TOM FOX

T

wenty years after the passage of the Hudson River Park Act, a major source of revenue originally intended to support the park’s operation and maintenance has yet to be secured. Failure to implement a major recommendation on long-term operating and maintenance is putting unnecessary development pressure on park assets, such as Pier 40. In 1990, when Hudson River Park was first proposed, city and state parks suffered from insufficient funding. To make the proposed park palatable to elected and appointed officials, the West Side Waterfront Panel suggested that the new park might be self-sufficient if radical new funding mechanisms for operation and maintenance were established. As the park was initially envisioned, the city and state would fund its construction. Community Board 2’s recent recommendation that the city and state fund bulkhead (seawall) restoration seems consistent with that commitment. However, back in 1998, all revenues generated in parks had to be transferred to the city or state’s general fund. To support long-term operation and maintenance of the new park, two new revenue streams, unique to this project, were recommended by the panel. The first was to allow the park to retain revenue generated within it. The first of these revenueproducing areas, Chelsea Piers, was completed in 1994. The second recommendation was the creation of a new mechanism to capture a portion of appreciation of adjacent inboard real estate within three blocks of the park. It’s clear that the $1.3 billion public investment in the park has drastically increased the value of adjacent inboard property and generated the new tax revenues initially anticipated. However, the second recommendation was conveniently ignored by elected and appointed officials when the Park Act was written in 1998, while they continued to demand the park be self-sufficient. Without that second funding stream, the park will never be self-supporting without the goose that laid the golden egg being killed by overdevelopment. This is even more puzzling given the rezoning of adjacent neighborhoods in Tribeca, Greenwich Village, Chelsea and Clinton (including Hudson Yards and Hudson Square) that were approved without new development projects in them contributing to the park — although all these projects’ marketing materials tout the park as providing public open space for increased commercial and residential populations. The original Friends of Hudson River Park studied the issue and in 2008 proposed the creation of a Neighborhood Improvement District to support the 4.5-mile-long park. The reconstituted Friends group, in 2016, released yet a second study confirming the value that the park adds to inboard property but has failed to propose a solution. The concept was favorably received at the recent meeting local politicians held to discuss possible legislative amendments for Pier 40. Without a second source of revenue from adjacent properties that have benefitted from the park, there will always be a scramble for funds. The Hudson River Park Trust’s efforts to increase development in the park will force local neighborhoods to continue to fight over limited resources. It’s time to formalize a way to capture inboard revenue generated by the park for its operation and maintenance. Any new legislation should address this and take pressure off Pier 40 to fund a disproportionate portion of the park’s annual budget. Fox was first president of the Hudson River Park Conservancy (which completed the Hudson River Park’s general project plan) from 1992-95 and founding board member of Friends of Hudson River Park from 1999-2011. Schneps Media

FILE PHOTO

Having a ball at the Leroy St. Dog Run in Hudson River Park.

The red balloon

Go, dogs, go!

To The Editor: Re “Wally Elvers, 95, longtime Villager, polymath” (obituary, June 6): What a wonderful testimony to the intelligence, love and fruitful originality of this lovely gentleman, who was my neighbor for many years, the husband of my friend Bibi, and the father of my two daughters’ friends Laurie and Susie. I remember a story Bibi told me many years ago, about how Wally’s parents arranged to take precautions against him getting lost when they went on excursions to the Bronx Zoo. They would buy a red helium balloon and tie it to his wrist, explaining that if he should ever find himself alone and without them, he should not run and panic, but rather stand still in the spot where he was and slowly raise his wrist up and down. His parents, who would of course be looking for him, would scan the horizon to see the red balloon rising and falling, and thus know where to look for him. What charms me about this story is how it demonstrates an encounter with a situation that for most of us would be fraught with terror, not to say hysteria, and shows us that the proper way to meet it is with reason, intelligence and originality.

To The Editor: Re “Not going to the dogs on Gansevoort, Pier 40” (oped, by Lynn Pacifico, June 6): Lynn is absolutely correct. We need more dog runs and they should be included as a part of every proposal for public spaces, including those on the waterfront. It’s always been a struggle to get dog runs in the Village, despite the fact that more and more dogs live here. The decision makers really shouldn’t be so dismissive of dog owners as we are an important part of the community and we vote!

Carol F. Jochnowitz TVG

Aubrey Lees

Bus is a lifeline To The Editor: Re “Figuring out 14th St.” (Editorial, June 6): I’m 75, with heart and lung issues, but living in active retirement at Hudson and 11th Sts. thanks to the 14A bus loop down to Hudson and Bleecker Sts., plus the M11 and M8 lines, which help me get to various doctors and other appointments and Off and Off Off Broadway theaters at night. It’s what keeps me going. Ending the 14A loop (the line I use most) will bring my life-preserving active life to a semi-halt and will no doubt

shorten my life. So this is deadly personal for me. The notoriously bad M20 bus is so erratic, late and slow, I’ve missed many a curtain time waiting for one to come. Low-income seniors can’t afford Ubers or taxis. Subway stairs are just too much. Please don’t abandon us. It is literally a matter of life and death. John Doyle

Follow the meds To The Editor: Re “ ‘This is fi xable’: Parkland father on U.S. gun violence” (news article, May 30): I don’t know about the latest shooter but all the priors were on antidepressants. The problem is not the guns but the criminal pharmaceutical industry — they are truly the bad guys. Lynn Pacifico E-mail letters, maximum 250 words, to news@thevillager.com or fax to 212-2292790 or mail to The Villager, Letters to the Editor, 1 MetroTech North, 10th floor, Brooklyn, NY 11201. Please include phone number for confirmation. The Villager reserves the right to edit letters for space, grammar, clarity and libel. Anonymous letters will not be published. June 13, 2019

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Eats

Vongerichten dives into seafood at The Fulton BY GABE HERMAN

A

new seafood restaurant from chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten, called The Fulton, opened recently at the South Street Seaport. This is the first seafood restaurant from Vongerichten, who now has 36 restaurants worldwide, including ABC Kitchen, abcV and Public Kitchen in Manhattan. The Fulton opened on May 14 and is named in honor of the Fulton Fish Market. At Pier 17, at 89 South St., it’s “located in an area of the city Vongerichten fell in love with when he first encountered the energy of the former Fulton Fish Market in 1986,” according to the restaurant’s Web site. The fish market was nearby at South St. from 1822 until 2005, when it moved to Hunts Point in the Bronx. The Fulton’s menu offers a wide range of seafood, including many local East Coast options. There is a raw bar with oysters, clams and sea urchins. The crudos (or “raw”) section of the menu includes sashimi on ice and yellowfin tuna tartare. There are appetizers like clam chowder, mussels, soft shell crabs and warm octopus with fresh mozzarella. Main dishes include fish stew thickened with aioli, black sea bass and Maine lobster with spring peas. There are also pasta and rice options, and beef and vegetable sections on the menu. The restaurant has two floors and includes sea-themed murals, along with views of the nearby Brooklyn Bridge. The hand-painted murals, by artists Diego Castano and

PHOTO BY ROBERT BREDVAD

The Fulton is the first seafood restaurant by Jean-Georges Vongerichten, above.

Chandler Noah, are based on the Jules Verne classic “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.” Vongerichten is also working on opening a food hall in the South St. Seaport’s Tin Building. Scheduled to

open in two years, it will feature a wide variety of cuisines, including seafood and beyond. In the meantime, more information on The Fulton can be found at thefulton.nyc.

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Walker Hotel: More than a pretty face BY MICAEL A MACAGNONE

G

uests arriving at the Walker Hotel Greenwich Village are greeted by a facade featuring copper-clad bay windows, cast-stone trim and restoration antique-glass illuminated by gas lanterns reminiscent of the early days of Greenwich Village. The exterior of the hotel, on W. 13th St. between Sixth and Seventh Aves., was inspired by the Georgian-revival towers found on New York’s famed Fifth Ave. of the 1920s. Inside sits a parlor with a fireplace, Art Decoinspired wall coverings, a display of original works by emerging local artists, plush couches and a library featuring New York-themed books mostly by authors who called Greenwich Village home. The luxury boutique hotel’s 113 rooms boast private landscaped patios, balconies with views of the Empire State Building and deep-soaking marble bathtubs. But don’t just judge The Walker Hotel Greenwich Village by its cover. Its mission goes far beyond that. MarcAnthony Crimi, the hotel’s general manager, explained that every decision the hotel makes must serve local or global communities in some way. The Walker Hotel Greenwich Village, formerly The Jade Hotel, was acquired in 2016. Crimi was tasked with the rebrand in April of 2016. For starters, on a local level, the Walker Hotel Greenwich Village supports many nearby small businesses through partnerships. Just a few examples include the hotel’s work with University Floral Design to decorate public spaces in the hotel, The New School of Jazz and Contemporary Music to provide live jazz entertainment to guests every week, and C.O. Bigelow for in-room bath amenities. The hotel also includes Society Cafe, a marketto-table American restaurant led by Executive Chef Manuel Gonzalez-Charles, who personally shops at the Union Square Greenmarket four days per week to create an ever-evolving American menu. In doing so, Society Cafe supports farmers from New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. The Walker Hotel Greenwich Village will also be an active participant in Pride this month. To celebrate World Pride, Society Cafe is partnering with Simple Vodka, which donates proceeds from the cost of a bottle to hunger-relief organizations, COURTESY WALKER HOTEL GREENWICH VILLAGE and also God’s Love We Deliver, the Greenwich For Pride Month, the Societ y Cafe at the Village-based organization that cooks and deliv- Walker Hotel Greenwich Village is par tnerers medically tailored meals to people in the metro ing with Simple Vodka and God’s Love We area living with serious illnesses, including H.I.V./ Deliver to provide hunger relief nationwide, AIDS. as well as nutritious meals to seriously ill Society Cafe has created three Pride-themed individuals in the metro area. Simple Vodka cocktails, half of the proceeds of which is being donated to God’s Love We Deliver. Crimi touted this dual partnership as working on and the L.G.B.T. Community Center. The Walker Hotel Greenwich Village also houses both the production side and the consumer side: Tour & Talk, a walking tour “talk back” that features Simple Vodka works to end hunger across America, prominent activist educators, including Emmy-nomwhile the proceeds from the cocktails’ sales go to God’s Love We Deliver, which attempts to alleviate inated filmmaker Cheryl Furjanic and Ken Kidd, an original member of Queer Nation and an active parhunger for the seriously ill in New York City. ticipant in the push to introduce the Equality Act in This year, the hotel also created a local partnership Congress. with Christopher Street Tours, a recently opened Crimi emphasized that he wanted the hotel to small business that provides tours of Greenwich Village focused on the L.G.B.T.Q. civil-rights movedo more than just host a party, which is what many ment in New York City. Among the tour’s stops are New York City businesses do to support Pride. He the Stonewall Inn, Christopher Park, the New York sees these talk backs as an opportunity to educate. City AIDS Memorial Park at St. Vincent’s Triangle, Crimi explained that, surrounding Pride, the hotel

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COURTESY WALKER HOTEL GREENWICH VILLAGE

The Walker Hotel Greenwich Village boasts an elegant facade, but its mission is hardly super ficial.

is striving to sincerely support the L.G.T.B.Q. community, rather than merely reap financial benefits from Pride. In addition to supporting small businesses and organizations in the city, the Walker also has a global reach. Coffee at the hotel is sourced from Coffee of Grace, an organization that trains Rwandan farmers — mostly women — how to cultivate the coffee bean, then buys the beans at above-market prices, and ships them privately back to New York City, to ensure the majority of the profits remain in the farmers’ village. Finally, the beans are roasted in Tribeca. The Walker Greenwich Village is also a member of the Clean the World Foundation, which addresses global health issues by using recycled and repurposed supplies from the hospitality industry. The housekeeping team at the Walker collects unused bath products left behind in guestrooms. The foundation separates the product from the plastic, and then recycles the product into new bar soap that is then distributed to emergency relief efforts around the globe. Crimi wishes all hoteliers would use their ability to effect positive change in their communities and beyond. “You do not need to be a big-box store with a huge budget in order to make a difference,” he stated. Crimi acknowledges that hotels might not be the ultimate catalyst for “changing the world,” as he put it. But he firmly believes that if every hotel took small actions similar to those of The Walker Greenwich Village, a measure of change could certainly be created. June 13, 2019

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PHOTO BY TEQUILA MINSKY

Getting into David Datuna’s “Cloning Eternity” in Washington Square Park. The other piece was a skull of similar size and materials.

Through the looking glass(es) Artist David Datuna’s installation “Closing Eternity” offered parkgoers in Washington Square a unique perspective during its 12-hours-only run, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., on May 31. The work’s two pieces, made from myriad eyeglass lenses, reflected the viewers’ images back toward them in a kaleidoscopic effect. In 2017, Datuna created an ice sculpture, “This Too Shall Pass,” in 10-foot-tall letters, in response to President Trump’s withdrawal from the Paris Climate Agreement. Erected in Union Square Park, it quickly melted.

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June 13, 2019

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Penn South creativity wows at annual show BY ALEJANDR A O’CONNELLDOMENECH

M

ore than 50 residents of the Penn South Co-operative had their artwork displayed at the Penn South Social Services’ third annual multimedia art exhibition last weekend. Dozens of paintings, drawings, sculptures and photographs lined the walls of the residential co-op complex’s community room on June 8 and 9. The exhibition was open and free to the public. The artists were diverse in age and experience. “Each year it gets better and better,” said Bridget Oteri-Robinson, a Penn South board member and an organizer of the exhibition, of the artwork displayed. “It’s fascinating the amount of talent we have here.” Throughout its 57-year-old history, the Penn South Co-op has been a model housing community. In the 1970s, the co-op created the Penn South Energy Conservation Plan to deal with the rising cost of energy in the city. According to Penn South’s Web site, in 1976, the co-op began to prepay some real

estate taxes to help the city during the financial crisis. And in 1986, the co-op created Penn South Social Services to improve the quality of life of co-op residents, in particular, its older population who were aging in place. The multimedia art exhibition is another example of how the co-operative is responding to residents’ needs and working to enrich the Chelsea community. According to Oteri-Robinson, the art exhibition started after a co-op resident approached the P.S.S.S. two years ago with the idea of starting a sketching group. “We said this is a fantastic idea,” she recalled. At the same time Oteri-Robinson and other P.S.S.S. members were approached about the sketching group, they were also working on a fundraiser, which they decided to turn into an art exhibit. Originally, the art exhibition solely featured work from members of the art groups within the co-op, its senior center and the ceramics studio. But now it is open to anyone within Penn South.

PHOTO BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

Ar tist and Penn South resident Ev y Williams in front of her painting “Spiritual Journeys.”

Labyrinth Dance Theater presents Conceived, Choreographed and Directed by Sasha Spielvogel

Celebrating and Honoring Thirty Years of Love, Loss and Hope; Gay Life in NYC 1965-1995

Come Back Once More So I Can Say Goodbye

PHOTO BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

“A Vast Expanse,” by Joseph Meloy.

June 14th–17th, 2019 The Alvin Ailey Citigroup Theater 405 West 55th Street, NYC (at the Corner of 55th St. & 9th Ave.)

Benefitting GMHC Ali Forney Center Live Out Loud and Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS Special Thanks to:

Honorary Host Committee: John Cameron Mitchell Terrence McNally and Tree of Stonewall

LabyrinthDanceTheater.org Schneps Media

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Manhattan Happenings kids age 5 and older; all children under 12 must be accompanied by an adult. Sun., June 16, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m, at 6th St. and Avenue B Community Garden. For more information, visit https:// greenthumb.nycgovparks.org/gardenevents.html?qs =2019/06/16/cooking-workshop-for-children-kids-getcooking-cook-your-culture .

BY MICAEL A MACAGNONE

MOVIES “Movies Under the Stars”: As part of the Stonewall 50th Anniversary and Celebrate Pride celebrations, the Washington Square Park Conservancy will be screening “Rebels on Pointe” (2017), directed by Bobbi Jo Hart. There will also be a Q&A with featured dancers from the film prior to the screening. The movie documents the world famous Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo, an all-male drag ballet company founded in New York City 45 years ago. It juxtaposes behind-the-scenes access, rich archives and history, intimate character-driven stories and amazing dance performances shot in North America, Europe and Japan. Thurs., June 13, Q&A a 8 p.m., followed by the film screening at dusk, around 9 p.m, at the Washington Square Park Arch plaza. Free.

KIDS / FAMILY Egg Rolls, Egg Creams and Empanadas: This daylong, free festival highlights the traditions of the Lower East Side via Chinese opera and acrobats, klezmer performances, salsa and

PERFORMANCES PHOTO BY YURI KALINA

“Sunset on the Hudson”: Nearly every Friday this summer, Hudson River Park will be offering free concerts set against a backdrop of beautiful sunsets. This week, the “Sunset on the Hudson” series presents the work of the Knickerbocker Chamber Orchestra. The evening promises to include some of the greatest music in 3/4 ever written, including the work of Scott Joplin, Richard Rogers, Johannes Brahms and Johann Strauss II. Fri., June 14, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., at Pier 45 (Christopher St. Pier), in Hudson River Park. Free.

The Girl (Lianne Gennaco) and The Bear (Seth Gilman) having fun in “My Undying Love: An Amusement.”

plena music, Puerto Rican mask making, Hebrew and Chinese scribal art and, of course, the festival’s namesake: kosher egg rolls, egg creams and crispy empanadas. Sun., June 16, noon to 4 p.m., at the Museum at Eldridge Street Synagogue, 12 Eldridge St. “Kids Get Cooking & Cook Your Culture”: NYC Parks GreenThumb will host a cooking workshop for children at an East Village garden. Participants will help create healthy dishes from a local family-inspired seasonal recipe, with veggies and herbs from the garden, plus from local Greenmarket farmers. For

“Undying (and Amusing) Love”: Composer/librettist Melissa Shiflett’s “My Undying Love: An Amusement,” a one-hour opera for audiences of all ages, will receive its world premiere at University Settlement. Shiflett has assembled a cast of singers whose cred-

its include the New York City Opera, Santa Fe Opera and Los Angeles Opera for this comic entertainment, described as “amusing, unsentimental, joyous and jazzy.” The production sports costumes by Matthew Pedersen, whose credits include the Metropolitan Opera and Steppenwolf Theatre, and set design by Justin Tolbert, who has designed for the Arthur Miller Society. Fri, June 21, to Sun., June 23 (Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m., Sunday at 2 p.m.) at University Settlement, 184 Eldridge St. Tickets $25; $18 for students and seniors. For reservations, visit MUL@ymronline. net or call 347-448-6039.

FORUM “Crackdown on Sexual Harassment”: The Women and Families Committee of Community Board 8 will host a special public forum, “Crackdown on Sexual Harassment: What you need to know now.” The talk will feature Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance, Jr.; Dana Sussman, deputy director of the NYC Commission on Human Rights; and Rick Rossein, CUNY Law School professor and expert on combatting sexual harassment. Thurs., June 13, 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m., at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1000 Fifth Ave., at E. 82nd St.

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To qualify for the $90 bonus, you must open a Flushing Bank Complete Checking account1 during our celebration month of June, an opening balance of $1,000 is required with an average balance of $1,000 or more each month through September 2019. Plus, get up to $200 when you open a new Complete Checking account and complete the required activities2. For more information, visit your local Flushing Bank branch, call 800.581.2889 (855.540.2274 TTY/TDD) or visit www.FlushingBank.com. Small enough to know you. Large enough to help you.® 1 Effective June 3, 2019 through June 30, 2019. New Complete Checking account with new money only. Existing checking account customers are not eligible. A new checking account is defined as any new checking account that does not have any authorized signatures in common with any other existing Flushing Bank checking account(s). An existing checking customer is defined as anyone who currently has or has had a Flushing Bank checking account within the last 24 months. The minimum opening balance required for Complete Checking is $25, but a minimum opening balance of $1,000 is required in this account to qualify for the respective advertised bonus. The new account must remain open, active, and in good standing through September 30, 2019 with an average balance of $1,000 or more each month. One $90 bonus per new Complete Checking customer which will be credited to the qualifying Complete Checking account in October 2019. A 1099 statement for the bonus value will be issued. The promotion and offer are subject to change and termination without prior notice at any time. 2 This offer is limited to one Complete Checking account per household. Minimum deposit required to open a new Complete Checking account is $25. No minimum balance required to be eligible for the Bonus. Direct Deposit – You will receive $100 for signing up for and receiving a recurring direct deposit of $250 or more. Tax refund checks do not qualify as direct deposit. Direct Deposits must be completed prior to 90 days after the account is opened. Debit Card Purchases – You will receive $50 for the completion of 5 debit card purchases. Each debit card purchase must be $25 or more. Online Banking Bill-payments – You will receive $50 for completing 5 online banking bill-payments via Flushing Bank’s Online Banking portal. Each online bill-pay must be $25 or more. Debit Card Purchases and Online Bill-payments must be completed prior to 60 days after the account is opened. THE MAXIMUM AMOUNT ANY CUSTOMER CAN RECEIVE IS $200. The compensation will be credited to the checking account on or about the end of the month following the completion of the above qualifying transactions within the required time after account opening. A 1099 will be issued in the amount credited to your account. Other fees and restrictions may apply. All offers are subject to change and termination without prior notice at any time. Flushing Bank is a registered trademark

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OPEN HOUSE DESTINATION: BMCC SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 2019 Call or Text (347) 305-4497

www.bmcc.cuny.edu/cng

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Please join us for the 26th Annual Meeting of the Village Alliance

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Monday, June 24th 6:00 - 7:30 PM St. John’s University Manhattan Campus 101 Astor Place (at Third Avenue)

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RSVP Required 212.777.2173 info@villagealliance.org

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Month x x - Month x x, 2019

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SOLVE YOUR CHILD’S READING PROBLEM ACHIEVE 13 TO TO 36 YEARS YEARS OF READING IMPROVEMENT SUMMER. THIS IN ONE YEAR!!! “A Miracle In The Making!” - CBS TV

CHILDREN AT OR BELOW GRADE LEVEL WILL BECOME THE BEST READERS IN THEIR CLASS

s /NE ON /NE 4UTORING FOR + TH GRADE s "ELOW !T OR !BOVE 'RADE ,EVEL 3TUDENTS s ,$ !$$ !$($ $YSLEXIA 3PECIAL .EEDS s 9OUR CHILD WILL READ BETTER FASTER WITH GREATER FLUENCY AND COMPREHENSION ADVANCING ONE YEAR EVERY WEEKS s 'RADES CONFIDENCE AND SELF ESTEEM WILL SOAR AS THEY LEARN TO LOVE READING AND SCHOOL s 9OUR YEAR OLD WILL LEARN WORDS IN THE ST SESSION s .O CONTRACTS n /PEN DAYS A WEEK r '3&& $POTVMUBUJPO m :FBST $FSUJñFE &YQFSJFODF

WATCH OUR NOW: THIS VIDEOS VIDEO NOW:

www.nymetroparents.com/listing/Dicker-reading Dickerreading.com/DRM_Advantage.ASP

Dicker Reading Method 75 Brook Street, Scarsdale | 914.472.0600 | www.DickerReading.com Schneps Media

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Real Estate

Is Manhattan the seniors’ paradise? BY MARTHA WILKIE

S

ome say Manhattan is only for the young or rich, but it’s also good for older people — as long as they have the means to live here. An Upper East Sider who just turned 80 said she values the convenience. “As an ‘elderly’ person there is no better place to live,” she said. “Almost everything I need is within a four-block radius: grocery store, pharmacy, cleaners, hardware store, bookstore — you name it. And if I can’t get out, they deliver.” And she loves her neighborhood. “The people, children and dogs are all familiar and make me feel connected and secure,” she said. “And, of course, there is the wonderful culture: movies, theater, music, dance, libraries, museums — and good public transportation. And for a glorious walk in the country, there is always Central Park!” Agent Ina Torton manages a special team, Next Move, dedicated to helping seniors leaving their longtime homes and finding new places to live, ones well-suited to aging in place. Factors to consider include wheelchair-accessible entrances and A.D.A.-compliant bathrooms. “Seniors move for different reasons, such as downsizing or to be near their children,” Torton explained. “Some want to escape the suburbs and be in the middle of the action. I’m a senior and I wouldn’t live anywhere else. There’s nothing like it!” Buildings or neighborhoods can become NORCs (Naturally Occurring Retirement Communities) and get free services from the city. “Department for the Aging funds supportive-services programs at dozens of NORCs in the city, where residents can access health and social services where they live,” Torton noted. “Services include health and wellness activities, fitness classes,

case-management assistance, help with benefits and entitlements, educational activities, outings and volunteer opportunities.” Searching for suitable apartments is difficult, although The New York Times does have a “wheelchair accessible” filter and the city maintains a list of NORCs online. In Morningside Heights, a spacious studio in a NORC on La Salle St. has a nice eat-in kitchen nook and is well priced. $349,000. (Brownstoner.com/listing/CORCORAN-5662616/100-la-salle-st-apt-21e-morningside-heights-ny-10027/) A two-bedroom, two-bath East Harlem rental has a doorman, elevator, no steps to enter and a stall shower. $3,995.

This Uptown NORC also spor ts a spacious eat-in kitchen nook.

Movin’ on up to an East Harlem rental with no steps up.

(Brow nstoner.com /listing/CIT IHABITATS-7018149/181-e-119th-stapt-8d-east-harlem-ny-10035/) On the Upper East Side, a one-bedroom, one-bath condo offers a gorgeous terrace, doorman and concierge. $798,000. (Onemanhattanre.com/upper-eastside/condo-for-sale/400-e-90th-st-6f/350332) In Chelsea, a one-bedroom, one-bath has a stall shower, doorman, elevator washer/dryer, valet service and a loungelike lobby where one can hang out and chat with neighbors. $1.5 million. (Brownstoner.com/listing/ ELLIMAN-3785155/101-w-24th-st-apt-7bchelsea-ny-10001/)

A gorgeous terrace comes with this Upper East Side one-bedroom.

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MAKE A SPLASH! The BMCC swimming pool has been renovated and is ready to welcome community swimmers, ages 18 and up. 4 +!'#-. 1 &( (# 4 -&*$ 3+0- +2* (+!' *" /+2#( Entrances: 199 Chambers Street & 77 Harrison Street Fees and Registration: BMCC Athletic Department at (212) 220-8260 Continuing Education at (212) 346-8410

www.campusce.net/bmccpool

VILL AGE APOTHECARY

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BRING THIS CARD IN AND RECEIVE $10 OFF ON ANY PURCHASE OF $25 OR MORE

The NY Child Victims Act may be able to help you!

FOR OTC PURCHASES & NEW CUSTOMERS ONLY. LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER

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2 1 2 . 8 0 7. 7 5 6 6 Schneps Media

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52 Duane Street, 7th Floor New York, NY 10007

Month x x - Month x x, 2019

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CONNECT FROM THE LOWER EAST SIDE TO OVER 20 WATERFRONT COMMUNITIES!

6 ROUTES NOW IN SERVICE! #COMMUTEINCOMFORT NYC FERRY ROUTES/SERVICES Astoria

BRONX

East River Lower East Side

Clason Point

EAST RIVER

Rockaway Soundview

$2.75 Fare

NYC Views

Concessions

Bike Racks

Table Space

Power Outlets

+Free Transfers

South Brooklyn

U

N

D V

IE

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Governors Island Summer Weekend Service

SO

Astoria

OTHER FERRY SERVICES

East 90th Street

Staten Island Ferry Service (Free)

QUEENS Roosevelt Island

Some landings shown do not yet exist Map as of 1/10/19

Long Island City Gantry Plaza State Park

LOWER EAST SIDE

East 34th Street Midtown East

Hunters Point South

ASTORIA

MANHATTAN

Greenpoint

Stuyvesant Cove North Williamsburg

EAST RIVER

South Williamsburg

Corlears Hook

Download the NYC Ferry App to Purchase Tickets, View Schedules & Service Alerts, and Track Your Ferry in Real-Time.

Brooklyn Navy Yard EAST RIVER

Wall Street

DUMBO SOUTH BROOKLYN

Pier 11

Brooklyn Bridge Park–Pier 1

BROOKLYN

Whitehall STATEN ISLAND FERRY

JAMAICA BAY

Brooklyn Bridge Park–Pier 6

Red Hook

Governors Island

ROCKAWAY

Sunset Park Brooklyn Army Terminal

Bay Ridge

St. George

UPPER BAY

N E

STATEN ISLAND

W S

@NYCFerry

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CNW

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