Chelsea Now, July 25, 2012

Page 1

Our man Amateau (see directly below)

VOLUME 4, NUMBER 50

THE WEST SIDE’S COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER

JULY 25 - AUGUST 7, 2012

A newsman looks back BY ALBERT AMATEAU When did it start? Age three going on four, stomping through half-empty house, shouting, “Where’s my printing set?” Gave explicit instructions to mother and father not to forget it in the move from Kings Highway, Brooklyn to Utopia Parkway, Queens. Don’t remember finding it. Copy boy, World Telegram & Sun (125 Barclay Street, 1952?). Made friends with fellow copy boy a few years older who lived on Avenue A, Allen Ginsberg. He carried around a library book about the Mayans and said he

Photo by Sally Helm

Mulch ado about something: Chelsea Garden Club spreads the love to area bike lane tree pits. See page 12.

Film shoots draw ire and support BY SAM SPOKONY Chelsea residents are sharply divided in their perceptions of film and photo shoots taking place on their block on West 21st Street — which some claim are being held illegally. Opinions are also split among those who were recently surrounded by a major Hollywood production that lasted nearly a week and resulted in the destruction of a city tree on Ninth Avenue. “[It’s] destroying the residential quality of the block,” said Steven J. Shore, who has lived in his apartment on the west 400 block of 21st Street for 18 years. “When the filming is in progress, the sidewalk on the north side of the street is frequently closed or restricted, parking is disrupted by the trucks and vans the various film companies use, and the quiet of our residential block is disrupted by the film personnel out on the street.”

Shore was referencing film and photo shoots that have taken place intermittently at two residences on his block (between Ninth and Tenth Avenues) since 2009. The buildings, at 425 and 441 West 21st Street, have sparked enough tension and controversy among the small group of neighbors that the Council of Chelsea Block Associations (CCBA) and Save Chelsea compiled a June 25 report on what the organizations perceive to be the two building owners’ violations of residential zoning laws. The report claims that 18 shoots have been observed at 425 West 21st Street since 2010, and that 49 have been observed at 441 West 21st Street since 2009 — including one that lasted 10 days — according to testimony from block residents. Citing NYC Planning Commission zoning regulations,

which state that no more than 500 square feet of a residential unit can be used for business purposes, the report also asserts that the owners of the two buildings advertise the use of much more space than is legally allowed. The website referred to in the CCBA report (betsy.com) is run by Elizabeth Morgan (one of the owners of 441 West 21st Street). As of July 23, it was advertising over 8,000 square feet of indoor space (between two separate apartments) and 2,000 square feet of outdoor space on her property, for film and photo shoots. “Such usage, in the [CCBA] and [Save] Chelsea’s opinion, adversely impacts the quality of life on the block, which has been turned into a commercial zone for the benefit of two property owners

was going to Yucatan to see the ruins, then hang out with friends in San Francisco. Ginsberg tells me about visiting Ezra Pound at St. Elizabeth’s asylum in Washington, D.C. Shows me a typescript of his own poems with a short blurb by William Carlos Williams. I show him a poem I had written with some not-very-good rhymes. His critique: “Forget that tired crap.” Copy boy on New York Post (75 West Street, 1956?), working midnight-to-8am shift: July 25, 1956, city room frantic.

Continued on page 4

Chelsea Market reaches ULURP halfway process BY SCOTT STIFFLER Wi t h a J u n e 6 “ N o , Unless” verdict from Community Board 4 (CB4) and a July 19 declaration of “Conditional Disapproval” from Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, Jamestown Properties’ bid to vertically expand Chelsea Market is now halfway through the Uniform Land Use Review Procedure (ULURP) process. The CB4 decision (reached via a 26-14 vote)

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515 C A N A L STREET • N YC 10013 • C OPYRIG H T © 2012 COMMU N ITY M ED IA , LLC

and Stringer’s detailed analysis of the ULURP application both came with recommendations for significant design changes and a firm philosophical opposition to the project. Opinions differ, however, as to what extent the current design will change, and what benefits the surrounding community will see. In addition to a 19 million dollar contribution to the High Line

Continued on page 7

EDITORIAL, LETTERS PAGE 8

INDIE-FOLK AT ROCKWOOD PAGE 23


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