Saturday, June 27, 2015

Board Wants to Trim Building Heights in Hudson Square Rezoning Plan

SOHO In an official recommendation to the City Planning Commission Thursday night, Community Board 2 voted to deny Trinity Real Estate's application for the rezoning of Hudson Square unless the company significantly reduces its proposed maximum building heights and creates a recreation center.

In a resolution passed at CB2's full board meeting, the advisory group described "broad support" for Trinity's goal to create a "diverse and vibrant mixed-use community," but asked for concessions to maintain the quality of life of current residents.

"A significant rezoning of this densely built environment with very few opportunities for open space and community facilities will cause negative effects on both the proposed area and the adjacent neighborhood," the resolution reads. "These effects must be mitigated in order for the proposal to be acceptable."

Trinity is seeking to transform an 18-block area within Hudson Square, which is still overwhelmingly zoned for commercial and manufacturing use, into a mixed-use neighborhood. The area subject to rezoning is roughly bound by West Houston Street, Sixth Avenue, Canal Street and Greenwich Street.

Arguing that overly tall buildings would "overwhelm the buildings that now create the character" of Hudson Square, CB2 urged the city to reduce the proposed building heights of 320 feet on wide streets and 185 feet on narrow streets.

CB2 also recommended incentives for developers to create affordable housing. On wide streets, the board requested a maximum height of 250 feet for buildings with affordable housing provisions and 210 for those without them. On narrow streets, CB2 asked for a maximum of 185 feet if affordable housing is present and 165 feet if it is not.

Silvia Beam, the head of the Vandam Street Block Association, said she wanted even lower heights in her neighborhood.

"The height limits on the buildings are still way too high," she said.

A recreation center with a gym, pool, community rooms and a small theater is also on CB2's wish list. The board proposed that Trinity build the center near the 444-seat public school it is planning on the northwest corner of Sixth Avenue and Canal Street.

Trinity Real Estate president Jason Pizer said in a statement that the company would continue to work with residents and elected officials.

"We are pleased that CB2 agrees with the goals of this proposed rezoning and supports the creation of a diverse and vibrant mixed-use community that preserves neighborhood character," he said.

CB2 also recommended that the city grant landmark status to the proposed South Village Historic District championed by the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation. The district is bordered by West Fourth Street, LaGuardia Place, Watts Street and Sixth Avenue.

Additionally, CB2 recommended that Trinity eliminate a planned zoning subdistrict that would have a dramatically lower maximum building height.

Under Trinity's plan, an area roughly bound by Dominick Street to the north, Varick Street and Sixth Avenue to the east, Watts Street to the south, and the entrance to the Holland Tunnel to the west could have buildings of up to 120 feet tall.

After multiple residents said the height restriction would unfairly cut into the sale values of their properties, CB2 voted against the creation of the zone, called Sub-District B.

Lifelong Broome Street resident Linda Sousa, 55, said Trinity's requested zoning for the sub-district would represent a huge blow to the value of her property.

"If this is approved, over half of the value of our properties will be appropriated for someone else's gain," she said.

In the next steps of the city's land-use review procedure, Trinity's proposal will be subject to an advisory vote by Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, followed by votes by the City Planning Commission and City Council.

New Startup Delivers Late-Night Mini Cakes Via Bikers in Spacesuits

MANHATTAN The founder of a new West Village-based business says it's high time for a gourmet solution to the munchies.

Greenwich Village and West Village residents can now have chocolatey treats delivered to their doorsteps as late as 2:30 a.m. by a bike-riding deliveryman wearing a spacesuit.

In mid-April, sweets purveyor Lazy Looz launched delivery in "the NYU area" of its bite-sized "no-bake chocolate biscuit cakes," founder and current deliveryman Rakan Ammouri said Tuesday.

With order-in service Thursday through Sunday from 7:30 p.m. to 2:30 a.m., Lazy Looz serves a crowd that skews young.

"Our market is anyone who needs a late-night sugar fix," Ammouri said. "Late-night munchies, that's actually a plus."

About the company's unconventional delivery method, the 27-year-old former banker said only, "I just wanted to be a little different." 

Growing up in Amman, Jordan, Ammouri and his brother Ramzi, 31, learned the recipe for the treat sometimes known as "lazy cake" from their mother. When Ammouri's girlfriend made him the treat last year for his birthday, the idea for the business hit him.

"I wake up at night for a bite of Looz," he said. "And I realized no one knew what it was."

The name for the sweets is a spin on his late mother's name, Leila, Ammouri said.

The mini-cakes made from tea biscuits or cookies, dark chocolate, condensed milk, cocoa powder and butter have the "slight crunch of a biscuit" and the gooeyness of melted chocolate, Ammouri said. They come in flavors including peanut butter, orange and mocha and are sold six to a box for $5.

For now, Lazy Looz delivers between roughly West 15th Street, Broadway, West Houston Street and Hudson Street. But Ammouri wants to bring sweets to more Manhattanites.

"The more demand we see, the bigger we'll get," he said. 

Friday, June 26, 2015

Electric Chair Window Display Puts Buzz in Bleecker St. Horror Show

WEST VILLAGE With Halloween fast approaching, high-end stores have turned Bleecker Street into an haute horror show complete with taxidermied animals, a metallic monster and an alarmingly realistic electric chair.

The Marc by Marc Jacobs Men's store at 382 Bleecker St. leads the pack of the tony retail strip's best seasonal window displays, with a wooden chair that hosts a heap of empty menswear using belts by the brand.

Store assistant manager Dan Donigan said the chair, which is guarded by a skeleton and a mannequin with a rat's head, has drawn loads of attention since it was set up recently.

"A lot of people have asked if it's real," he said, "and have said it's kind of creepy and sadistic."

The chair was bought from a Halloween store, and the skeleton with transparent arms full of blue and red wires was made by Brooklyn-based design group The Guild, Donigan said.

Across the street, a wrapped-up dressmaker's dummy in the window of the Ralph Lauren RRL store at 381 Bleecker St. rivals the creepiness of the Marc Jacobs window by crawling with furry mice.

A store manager said the display, filled with anchors and chains, draws on one of the company's clothing trends.

"It was inspired by our Royal Navy line, so [the window] has an old, creepy ship theme," said the manager, who declined to give her name.

Farther south on the block, the Alexis Bittar jewelry store at 353 Bleecker St. showcases the brand's baubles on taxidermied animals.

A chunky gold bracelet is looped around the ears of a white rabbit, and another jewel is clutched by a stuffed squirrel.

At the Cynthia Rowley store at 376 Bleecker St., mannequins with dark-eyed "Day of the Dead"-inspired masks model white and black dresses.

Jacobs also offers up a display of Halloween ghouls at another of his Village stores, at 403 Bleecker St.

The window of the Marc by Marc Jacobs Women's store features a fierce metal monster with a branded tote bag in its teeth, penned inside a lush, imitation jungle.

Cab-Jacker Sentenced to 11 Years in Prison After High-Speed Chase

 Michael Findley crashed a stolen cab into a light poleĀ on Feb. 27, 2011 after speeding 80 mph through downtown Manhattan.
Michael Findley crashed a stolen cab into a light pole on Feb. 27, 2011 after speeding 80 mph through downtown Manhattan.
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Phoebe Kingsak/Twitter

MANHATTAN The man who commandeered a terrified cab driver's vehicle on the Lower East Side and raced through the streets of Greenwich Village and SoHo at 80 mph more than two years ago was sentenced to 11 years in prison Wednesday.

California native Michael Findley, 33, was convicted of robbery, reckless endangerment, grand larceny and criminal possession of stolen property for hijacking a cab and taking a 25-minute joyride early Feb. 27, 2011.

According to police and the Manhattan District Attorney's office, Findley's crime spree began when he flagged down a taxi at the Bowery and Delancey Street after 3 a.m. When the driver tried to throw Findley out of the cab at East Houston and Lafayette streets, Findley punched the cabbie, climbed into the driver's seat and sped off, leading police on a high-speed chase through red lights and into oncoming traffic.

The nearly half-hour-long chase ended when Findley wrapped the cab around a light pole at Union Square West and East 15th Street.

Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance Jr. said Findley deserves the 11-year sentence followed by five years on probation.

This defendant stole a taxi cab and recklessly sped for more than 30 blocks through the streets of New York, endangering the lives of everyone who had the misfortune to cross his path, Vance said in a statement. It is a miracle that no bystanders were seriously hurt that night.

Findley, who defended himself after discharging his court-appointed attorney, claimed to have an IQ of 165 and told a Manhattan jury he was drunk and under the influence of cocaine at the time of the chase.

I was drunk! I didnt have any intentions! I didnt even want the car," he said, according to the New York Post.

Findley is being held on Rikers Island and is set to be transferred to state prison. 

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Buy A Trump SoHo Condo For $1.9M in Bitcoin Only

 The owner of a one-bedroom home in the Trump SoHo "condo-hotel" listed the unit on May 2, 2013 with the provision that it be bought exclusively in the money-substitute known as Bitcoin.
The owner of a one-bedroom home in the Trump SoHo "condo-hotel" listed the unit on May 2, 2013 with the provision that it be bought exclusively in the money-substitute known as Bitcoin.
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(Masck/Flickr)

MANHATTAN A whole lot of virtual currency can now buy a luxury apartment in the real world.

The owner of a one-bedroom home in the Trump SoHo "condo-hotel" listed the unit on Thursday with the provision that it be bought exclusively in the money-substitute known as Bitcoin.

Listed on the "Bitcoin luxury marketplace" BitPremier, the 741-square-foot suite with one-and-a-half bathrooms was on the market for 18,547.617 bitcoin, the equivalent of $1,947,500, on Thursday afternoon. The value of the currency created in 2008 by an anonymous group of tech experts fluctuates.

BitPremier founder Alan Silbert told Business Insider, which was first to report on the listing, that he thinks demand for the unit in the 48-story glass building at 246 Spring St. will be high.

"There are plenty of Bitcoin millionaires out there, and it's burning a hole in their pocket," Silbert told the website. "I think buyers will be easy to come by."

The equivalent of $1.3 billion worth of bitcoins are in circulation now, according to its creators. 

Family of Woman Killed by Truck in Union Square Sues City for $30 Million

MANHATTAN The mother of a 21-year-old actress who was struck and killed by a garbage truck in a Union Square hit-and-run this spring has sued the city in the fatal crash for $30 million claiming that poor roadway conditions and the design of the vehicle contributed to the young woman's death.

In a lawsuit filed Friday in New York State Supreme Court, Roxana Sorina Buta's mother, Cristina Oprea, charges the city, the Department of Transportation, the Department of Design and Construction, an unnamed driver and the truck manufacturer with negligence she claims caused the deadly May 24 crash.

It also claims the unidentified driver who has not been charged in the incident must have known he or she struck Buta due to the force of the impact. 

"Upon information and belief, the driver fled the scene and is free to continue driving New York City dump trucks recklessly, while Roxana is dead and her mother, Ms. Oprea, is simply devastated and suffers extreme emotional distress from the loss of her only child," the lawsuit states.

In addition to accusing the driver of being "careless and reckless," the suit blames the city for creating poor traffic and road conditions at the high-volume intersection.

Buta, who friends described as talented and lighthearted at a June vigil, was struck by a dump truck shortly after 1 a.m. on Thursday, May 24 as she crossed Broadway, south of 14th Street, heading from her Greenwich Village waitressing job to her East Harlem apartment.

According to the lawsuit, Buta had been crossing Broadway eastbound, with the walk signal, when she was struck.

The suit charges the city, DOT and DDC with improperly designing and maintaining the roadway, and with failing to control traffic or warn drivers to watch for pedestrians.

A flaw in the pavement may have contributed to the crash, the suit states. In the spot where Buta was struck, there is a dip in the asphalt that causes pedestrians to step off the sidewalk "into a lower stance and out of the view of drivers," according to the suit.

Additionally, the lawsuit claims that the driver must have known he had hit someone, "because the force of the impact would have obviously alerted him to this fact."

The driver was not charged in the crash and there is no criminality suspected, police said.

The District Attorney's office rejected multiple requests by Oprea and her lawyer, Joe Tacopina, to identify and prosecute the driver, according to the suit.

The DA's office did not immediately respond to an inquiry.

Transportation advocates have called the incident part of a larger trend of drivers involved in fatal pedestrian crashes not being held accountable for their actions.

The suit also accuses the truck manufacturer, Mack Trucks, Inc., of recklessly selling a product with large blind spots.

"Defendants were negligent, careless and reckless in the driving, ownership, operation, management, maintenance, supervision, use and control of and manufacturing of the Mack Truck," the suit says.

A spokeswoman for the city's Law Department said the office had not yet seen the suit.

"We recognize that this case involves tragic circumstances," the spokeswoman said. "We will review the legal papers when we receive them."

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

'Nerd-Cappella' Choir Seeking Geeky Songbirds

MANHATTAN Calling all geeks who can carry a tune.

A club called Choirfly, which touts itself as having New York's "premiere nerd-themed a cappella group," is holding open auditions in NoHo Wednesday night for people who love both music and nerd culture. 

"Choirfly's members share a love of singing, in addition to their affections [for] comic books, video games, sci-fi, RPGs [role-playing games] and fantasy," the group explained on Facebook. 

The choir is seeking singers for all voice parts, with no experience necessary, according to audition information.

Would-be nerd crooners should come prepared to sing "Professional Pirate" from the 1996 movie "Muppet Treasure Island" and the "Weird Al" Yankovic song "Hardware Store," which is about someone who loses sleep because he's so excited about a new hardware store opening in his town.

More than 20 people have indicated on Facebook that they would take their shot at joining the choir. Others from across the country said they wished they could chime in.

"I want to move to NYC just to join a nerd-themed a cappella group [called] Choirfly," @robot wrote. 

"Love the concept, ADORE the name, and totally wishing you were in L.A.," another Twitter user, @RebelBelleWed wrote. 

Others lamented the fact that they couldn't attend because of other nerdy commitments. 

"Will there be additional auditions? My life is owned by Gothic Renaissance until November 1st, and I'm definitely interested," Facebook user Melissa Koval wrote, referring to the Fourth Avenue Goth clothing and costume shop.

The Choirfly auditions will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 24 at 440 Studios at 440 Lafayette St., Room 3B.

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