Showing posts with label Sunnyside Gardens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sunnyside Gardens. Show all posts

Monday, April 14, 2008

The Sunnyside Gardens Preservation Alliance Announces a Spring Walking Tour

Sunnyside Gardens: Queens’ Newest Landmark District, New York’s most famous Planned Community

Saturday, May 17, 1:00–3:30 PM

Just 20 minutes from Manhattan, Sunnyside Gardens was designed by noted architects Clarence Stein and Henry Wright from 1924-28 as a “garden city” for working families. Linked by common walkways, its streets and open areas feature a combination of rowhouses and small-scale apartments, many with beautiful landscaping.

Photo: Herbert Reynolds

Highlights include:
- A walk through the Gardens at its most beautiful time of year
- A visit to one of only two private parks in New York City.
- Phipps Garden Apartments: another fascinating model development.
-The former homes of actress Judy Holliday and urban historian Lewis Mumford.

The cost of the tour is $20.00. Proceeds will benefit the Sunnyside Gardens Preservation Alliance. Reservations are required, is limited to 30 persons. The tour will meet by the flagpole in the small park at 52nd Street and Roosevelt Avenue, adjacent to the subway exit. Take a local 7 train to 52nd St/Lincoln Ave. Exit using the 52nd Street stairway.

For Reservations and Information: Please call 646-298-8669, or e-mail tonythetourguy@gmail.com.

Thursday, January 03, 2008

Best of 2007: The Designation of the Sunnyside Gardens Historic District

As grassroots activists create new campaign and advocacy tactics, the preservation toolbox continues to grow. Yet official designation by the LPC still remains the preservationist’s holy grail, which is just one reason why the designation of the Sunnyside Gardens Historic District makes our shortlist this year. Now the largest historic district in Queens, with over 620 residential structures, Sunnyside Gardens owes its designation to the unwavering support of preservation advocates, elected officials, and of course, its local neighborhood organization, the Sunnyside Gardens Preservation Alliance. Despite ongoing opposition from a small but vocal minority, the community remained focused and guided their designation through to the very end.

Of course, 2007 saw the successes of a number of other long-term preservation campaigns with the designations of the Crown Heights North (phase 1), DUMBO, and Eberhart Faber Pencil Company Historic Districts, as well as the designations of McCarren Pool and two federal row houses on Grand Street, among others, as individual landmarks. And though not an official city historic district yet, the proposed Fiske Terrace-Midwood Park neighborhood was finally heard in front of the commission and is awaiting designation. Send a statement of support for this district to comments@lpc.nyc.gov. For more information on these neighborhoods, visit our Neighborhood at Risk and click here to learn about HDC’s choices for the most significant “Heard but not Designated” structures (a list which has dwindled from twenty-one to twelve unprotected properties in only two years!).

LPC has taken an active approach to increasing the number of landmark designations over the past year, and a large number of them have occurred in the outer boroughs. This is thanks in large part to the commission’s increased budget, which allowed new survey staff members to be hired. In May, HDC joined with other preservation organizations throughout the city to hold a Preservation Lobby Day on the steps of city to rally to allocate an additional $1 million dollars to the LPC’s annual budget

Monday, October 29, 2007

Sunnyside Gardens Designation Affirmed by City Council

49-0.

Congratulations all.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Sunnyside Passes City Council Subcommittee Vote

Direct from City Council: http://www.nyccouncil.info/pdf_files/newswire/102_102407_sunnyside.pdf

CITY HALL – The subcommittee on Landmarks, Public Siting and Maritime Uses, chaired by Council Member Jessica Lappin, today recommended landmark status for the historic
neighborhood of Sunnyside Gardens in Queens. One of the most significant planned residential communities in New York City, Sunnyside Gardens has achieved national and international recognition for its low-rise, low density housing arranged around landscaped open courtyards. The measure, which passed the full subcommittee by a vote of 9 to 0, will create the largest historic district in Queens.

Sunnyside Gardens was the first attempt of the Regional Planning Association of America to create a garden city. The RPAA believed they could create a physical solution to the congestion and large population density that defined many other areas of the City. Sunnyside Gardens is a unique example of a working-class neighborhood that embraces open space and green terrain. From the very beginning, the neighborhood represented a fundamental change in the way cities were developed.

"Sunnyside Gardens was a model for innovative urban development when it was created a half century ago, and it deserves to be preserved," said Chair of the Subcommittee on Landmarks, Public Siting and Maritime Uses, Jessica Lappin. "This beautiful community that celebrates green open space is a prime example of urban development at its best."

In addition, the Landmarks Preservation Commission will issue the first ever homeowners guide about just what the landmarking will entail to alleviate any concerns that residents might have regarding the new status of their neighborhood. Upon its release, the guide will entail the different rules that come along with the new designation, including what level of review is necessary for different types of maintenance or renovation work a homeowner might wish to undertake. It will also make it easier for homeowners to plan desirable alteration that will ensure that the character of the neighborhood remains intact.

"Landmarking the neighborhood of Sunnyside Gardens is a fitting tribute both to the past and to the future of our city," said Speaker Christine C. Quinn. "In an era when we are trying to make our city a greener place to live, we must do what we can to preserve a place that had such arevolutionary impact on our open space. I want to thank Council Members Lappin and Katz for their work on this issue."

"Everyone who visits or lives in the Gardens immediately realizes what a special place it is. With its tree-lined streets and beautiful open spaces, it is an oasis in the midst of the City. Like many, I’ve always loved this neighborhood, and am proud to call it home and to represent it on the City Council," said Councilman Eric Gioia. "Working together, we have reached a decision that will help guarantee that Sunnyside Gardens retains its unique character and charm for generations to come."

"I commend the Landmarks Preservation Commission for moving this Queens Historic District forward and for drafting rules particular to the Sunnyside Gardens Historic District," said Land Use Committee Chair Melinda Katz. "This designation will preserve and protect this beautiful oasis for years to come."

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Supporting Sunnyside Gardens

From: Eric Gioia <mailto:gioia@council.nyc.ny.us>
Date: Sep 26, 2007 11:34 AM
Subject: Sunnyside News from Councilman Eric Gioia

Dear Friends and Neighbors:

Greetings to you and your family! As fall arrives, I wanted to write and update you on some important neighborhood developments, including the creation of the Sunnyside Business Improvement District, City Council hearings on landmarking Sunnyside Gardens, graffiti cleanup day, and greenmarkets in Sunnyside and Long Island City.

It gives me great pride to walk up the steps of City Hall every day to represent the neighborhood where I grew up. As always, if you would like additional information on any of these topics, please call my office at 718.383.9566.

Sincerely yours, Eric Gioia

Sunnyside Gardens Landmarking Hearing

On October 9th at 11 am at City Hall, the Landmarks Subcommittee of the City Council will hold a hearing on Sunnyside Gardens, marking the beginning of the final phase of the landmark designation process. The hearing will be followed by a vote by both the Landmarks Subcommittee and the Land Use Committee and, finally, by the entire City Council.

At the hearing, members of the community will have the opportunity to offer testimony. I hope that, if possible, you will take advantage of this opportunity to let your opinions be known to my City Council colleagues.

Sunnyside Gardens is a neighborhood I know and love well, and it is also the neighborhood I've chosen to live in with my family and where I plan to raise my daughter. It's a special place that means a lot to me, as it does to the hundreds of residents inside the proposed landmark district and to thousands and thousands more who have somehow, like me, been touched by the neighborhood. At the hearing, I will speak in favor of landmark designation, as my personal belief is that landmarking represents the best way to preserve the unique and special character of the Gardens.

Whatever your point of view, I urge you to join me at City Hall on the morning of the 9th. Should you have any additional questions about the hearing or the designation process, please call my office at 718.383.9566.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Amendment to Sunnyside Special District Debated

From the Times Ledger

09/13/2007
Residents doubt Sunnyside Gardens permit rule
By Jeremy Walsh

The Sunnyside Gardens Historic District has been approved by the City Planning Commission and is on its way to the final City Council vote on Oct. 9, but a new amendment intended to streamline the construction-permit application process is raising eyebrows among historic-preservation boosters.

The proposed amendment would end the requirement that Sunnyside Gardens homeowners submit construction-permit applications to both the Landmarks Preservation Commission and the Planning Commission, leaving the LPC in charge of enforcing regulation.

The LPC has already taken over de facto authority for permits in the neighborhood, but supporters of the historic district worry that the amendment would also take away specific Planning Commission regulations included in the neighborhood's 1974 designation as a special planned community preservation district.

"Our goal, and our assumption, was that the protections that the neighborhood had under the special zoning would remain and would be incorporated into the landmark-designation rules," said resident Jeffrey Kroessler. "The proposed rules that city Planning have put out do not seem to do that. They seem to be upzoning our neighborhood."

Spokesmen for the Planning Commission said the amendment would preserve the 1974 special zoning regulations. The text of the amendment shows the older restrictions have been retained, although it also states that R4 zoning regulations will generally be in place throughout the district. The majority of the structures in the neighborhood are already zoned R4, which allows residential structures up to 35 feet high.

At a Community Board 2 meeting last week, Amanda Ikert, a city planner, told residents the changes would mostly affect buildings in the district south of Skillman Avenue where, according to a zoning map available on the Planning Commission Web site, buildings are zoned R7-1 and C4-2 for medium-density apartment buildings and regional commercial centers, respectively.

The LPC has been monitoring changes and additions to homes in the new historic district since the agency approved the designation in June. According to Lisi De Bourbon, LPC director of communications, the commission has approved 13 changes over two months.

Resident Laura Heim, who has presented a pair of applications to both agencies, said the LPC has "clarified the process."

"I approached city Planning about these two projects a year ago, and they seemed unwilling to confirm that they didn't require their approval," she said. The LPC, she said, approved them quickly.

Under the current rules, the Planning Commission requires the extensive Universal Land Review Process for any proposed change. Many historic district supporters said the complication of ULRP meant most homeowners attempted to make changes under the Planning Commision's radar.

"It did not work in terms of allowing people to do work legally," said Dan Allen, an architect and Sunnyside Gardens resident. "Only two permits issued in 33 years is not a great track record."

De Bourbon said it was her understanding that the older zoning regulations would be retained. She was optimistic about the amendment.

"We have the expertise and the tools and the experience to regulate this kind of work," she said. "We do it in other districts, and we can do it in this one."

But before enforcement can be handed off entirely to the LPC, it must pass the scrutiny of two borough government entities. The Planning Commission forwarded the proposed amendment to Community Board 2 and Borough President Helen Marshall on Aug. 20 for a 60-day review period. Though it is not required, Community Board 2 Chairman Joseph Conley said the community will have a chance to discuss it and suggest further changes.

"I can't imagine not having a public hearing," Conley said. The community board plans to hold the hearing at the Sunnyside Senior Center sometime during the week of Oct. 8.

Neighbors have clashed over the historic district designation effort, which began four years ago. At an April 17 LPC hearing on the subject, 138 residents spoke in favor of it and 27 residents opposed it. The LPC approved the designation in June. Miriam Allen, an opponent of the landmarking process, said she and other landmarking foes were considering legal action.

Reach reporter Jeremy Walsh by e-mail at jwalsh@timesledger.com or by phone at 718-229-0300, Ext. 154.

Thursday, September 06, 2007

Sunnyside PC Text Amendment Moving Ahead

From the Queens Courier

Amendment would help Gardens homeowners
BY CHRISTINA SANTUCCI

Thursday, September 6, 2007 10:41 AM CDT

Sunnyside Gardens residents might not have to make multiple applications to renovate their houses, should an amendment in the City Planning Commission (CPC) get the go-ahead.

The amendment, which CPC members began drafting on Wednesday, August 22, would require homeowners in Sunnyside Gardens - one of four Special Planned Community Preservation Districts in the city - to apply only through the Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC).

According to a CPC spokesperson, the text amendment has been passed along to Community Board 2 and Queens Borough President Helen Marshall, who will both be allowed concurrent 60-day review periods. Afterward CPC will consider and then either approve or deny the amendment.

In the past several months, applicants had to file paperwork through as many as three city agencies - the LPC, CPC and the Department of Buildings (DOB). Should the amendment be okayed, then the LPC will review applications and issue approvals and denials based on historic district requirements and the LPC’s own purview.

“The Landmarks Preservation Commission has the tools, expertise and experience to effectively regulate work in the new Sunnyside Gardens Historic District and preserve its special character,” said LPC spokesperson Lisi de Bourbon.

Sunnyside Gardens residents have had to get multiple approvals since June, when area was given historic district status. Since then, homeowners have been required to get a CPC permit for new developments, enlargements or substantial alterations of landscaping and topography.

However, some residents and local politicians, in the months leading up to the historic district creation, called the alteration application process lengthy and cumbersome.

Still, others hope that the amendment will not allow for creations out of character with the neighborhood.

“Ideally the review process will be streamlined but the regulations are still there,” said Laura Heim, a Sunnyside Gardens architect and three-year resident, who recently won approval on the first two projects to be okayed since June. Heim will work on an enclosed porch and a rear dormer.

In order to make sure that the single-application process would not create any construction loopholes, CPC included in its amendment several guidelines for the area - a maximum building height, density and yard regulations, and off-street parking regulations for an R4 zoned area. In addition, the prohibition on curb cuts will continue, a spokesperson said.

Still, residents expressed concern in particular that the switch over to review by the LPC would allow homeowners to make alterations permitted by R4 zoning - like enlargements - and that illegal construction already completed would be grandfathered into legality.

Monday, August 27, 2007

First Legal Work in Sunnyside Gardens in a long time

From the Queens Tribune (would it kill them to get the facts straight?)

First Facelift Approved For Sunnyside Gardens
By MICHAEL CUSENZA

After earning coveted landmark status in June, Sunnyside Gardens, one of only four Special Planned Community Preservation Districts in the City, is getting some work done.

The City’s Landmarks Preservation Commission unanimously approved last week the first two exterior renovation projects in the newly minted historic district: the renovation of an existing enclosed porch in Washington Court and the redesign of a rear dormer in Hamilton Court.

After a year spent seeking approvals, Laura Heim Architect PLLC will handle both projects.

“I was very pleased and very honored to represent the client for the first two projects that went through,” Heim said. She opened her firm in March 2006, has an office in the Gardens and has lived in Sunnyside for the past three years.

The Washington Court project, Heim explained, involves restoring a non-historic, vertical wood-sided enclosed porch. To create a “more charming, porch-like enclosure,” Heim will include a white painted frame holding new multi-pane sliding French doors and two double-hung windows.
In Hamilton Court, Heim said she will repair a decayed dormer, which is an extension erected out of a sloping roof to accommodate a vertical window, built before 1940. Heim explained that her concept “reduces the size of the dormer by setting it back from the rear façade and increasing the slope of the dormer roof, which not only makes less prominent and more compatible with and adjacent dormer, but also diminishes wall height and improves water drainage.”

Heim had to present her ideas for approval from the Landmarks Preservation Commission, the City Planning Commission and the Department of Buildings. During a meeting this week, a city planning spokesman said an amendment was proposed that would eliminate duplicative regulations and the need to gain approve from multiple agencies.

THIS IS INCORRECT INFORMATION ---> For years, property owners in Sunnyside Gardens have had to go to the Landmarks Preservation Commission and the City Planning Commission for approval of property modifications. Under the proposed amendment, owners would simply have to apply directly to the LPC, which would handle the rigorous review process and issue approvals or denials. <---Sunnyside Gardens just became a HD!

“Work in the neighborhood will be much easier to complete with outlined and enforced Landmarks regulations,” Heim said. “Clearly the Landmarks Preservation Commission is the proper agency to regulate the neighborhood for appropriateness.”

A city planning spokesman also said that in order to “ensure consistency between the zoning provisions for Sunnyside Gardens and the built character of the neighborhood, the proposed text amendment would retain the Special Planned Community District in Sunnyside Gardens and establish a uniform maximum building height, density and yard regulations, and off-street parking pursuant to an R4 district in the special district’s underlying commercial and residential districts.”

The special regulations for Sunnyside Gardens would also generally maintain the prohibition on curb cuts, as well.

Tuesday, July 03, 2007

One Paper, 3 articles on Landmarks

City taps Sunnyside Gardens
New York Daily News
BY DONALD BERTRAND

The city's Landmarks Preservation Commission voted unanimously last week to designate the 16-block, 54-acre Sunnyside Gardens as a historic district.

Housing vs. preservation for Domino Sugar plant
New York Daily News
BY RACHEL MONAHAN

A huge red sign on the Williamsburg waterfront reads "SAVE DOMINO" - and symbolizes the high-profile fight over the future of the former sugar factory.

Some parts of the Domino Sugar plant, shuttered for three years, are likely to be preserved. But at a city Landmarks Preservation Commission hearing last week, arguments still raged over the right balance between preservation and housing.

Both affordable housing advocates and the developer called on the commission to limit landmarking to just a central portion of the plant - made up of three structures that date back to 1882.

But preservationists would like to save newer buildings as well.

Built during the Depression, swimming center is architectural feat
New York Daily News
BY ANDREW J. HAWKINS

In an unanimous vote last week, the city Landmarks Preservation Commission designated the Depression-era, 925000-gallon swimming pool a city landmark.

The commission slathered praise on "one of New York's greatest architectural feats of the Depression era" with praise for its "soaring, arched gateway," "decorative brickwork" and "streamlined curvilinear forms."

"Crotona's upper courtyard has the feeling of a Spanish or French castle," said Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe, who celebrated opening day for the public pools Friday by diving into the Van Cortlandt pool. "What's important specifically about the architecture is how it makes users feel important," he said. "You live in the South Bronx but you get to swim in this palace."

Friday, June 29, 2007

You dance with the one that brought you: Queens local press on Sunnyside landmark designation

From the Queens Chronicle

Sunnyside’s ‘Garden City’ Earns Designation
by Jennifer Manley , Assistant Editor

After years of preservationists pushing for it, months of impassioned arguments against it, and even a few last-minute protests, the Landmarks Preservation Commission has ended the debate in Sunnyside Gardens — voting unanimously Tuesday to designate it a historic district.
The neighborhood was designed and built between 1924 and 1928 on a garden city model. It quickly became a shady home for dozens of working-class people and a model of urban planning. Now it has become the 88th historic district in the city and the largest in Queens.
Assuming the City Council gives the district their blessing — a likelihood now that Councilman Eric Gioia has come out publicly for it — residents will have to get changes to their property approved by the city.

While homeowners are not required to return their homes to their original condition, future changes, particular to the fronts and the significant features, will be closely watched.
Brick facades, slate roofs and six-over six windows will have to remain in the spirit (if not the actual material) of the original. Curb cuts, large additions and tear downs are all a thing of the past now.

From the Queens Courier

Sunnyside Gardens to be a historic district
BY CHRISTINA SANTUCCI

Sunnyside Gardens will almost surely go down in the history books. On Tuesday, June 26, the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) voted unanimously to give the neighborhood historic district status, which would make it the largest district in the borough, ending a contentious battle between residents.

And From the Times-Ledger

06/28/2007
Sunnyside Gardens made historic district
By Adam Pincus

The city Landmarks Preservation Commission voted unanimously this week to designate Sunnyside Gardens a historic district following a drive that split the community between supporters and opponents of the proposal.

The proposal, approved by a vote of 9-0 Tuesday, seeks to protect the approximately 610 buildings in the neighborhood from out-of-character development as pressure increases to build housing in the borough for a growing population.

"Sunnyside Gardens is an extraordinary and iconic example of urban perimeter block housing planning, which has been studied, revered and emulated by generations of architects and planners," said Landmarks Preservation Commissioner Margery Perlmutter, who represents Manhattan. "Unlike many housing typologies that preceded and succeeded it, Sunnyside's successes and design principles have never been marginalized. For these reasons, I was in fact surprised to learn that it had not already been designated as a NYC historic district."

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Sunnyside Gardens Press Round-up

LANDMARK DAY IN QNS.
New York Post
By TOM TOPOUSIS
June 27, 2007 -- Sunnyside Gardens, a 16-block residential enclave in Queens, won approval as a historic district yesterday by a unanimous vote.

Queens Neighborhood Is a Landmark; Domino Plant Is Likely to ...
New York Times
By Michael Wilson

Area of Sunnyside, Queens, Is Given Landmark Status
New York Times
By ELLEN BARRY
The Landmarks Preservation Commission voted unanimously yesterday to give landmark status to Sunnyside Gardens, in Queens.

Queens housing development nominated for landmark status
Staten Island Advance
NEW YORK (AP) — A housing development in Queens constructed for middle-class families during a housing shortage after World War I was designated yesterday.

Despite Protests, Sunnyside Gardens Named Historic District
NY1
A decision to preserve the character of one Queens neighborhood had some residents jumping for joy Tuesday while others cried foul. (watch the clip and notice that the scenes from the Gardens were taken in the winter - when they first ran this story).

Board votes to landmark Sunnyside
amNewYork, New York
By Magdalene Perez
A contentious battle over whether to landmark the historic community of Sunnyside Gardens in Queens ended today.

Historic Vote For Queens Neighborhood
New York Sun

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Sunnyside Gardens Designated as NYC's Newest Historic District

This morning the Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) voted to designate Sunnyside Gardens as the seventh and newest Historic District in the borough of Queens, bringing the total number of districts citywide to 88. Sunnyside Gardens, one of the most significant planned residential communities in New York City, is internationally recognized among planners and urbanists for its low-rise, low-density quality housing. The Historic Districts Council has been working with residents in the neighborhood since 2003 to gain this designation. “It’s wonderful to be able to add Sunnyside Gardens to the list of protected landmarks in Queens as the borough’s seventh historic district,” stated Paul Graziano, president of HDC. “Congratulations to the neighbors who worked so hard to get this designation passed and we look forward to its support from the City Planning Commission and City Council.”

Constructed between 1924 and 1928 on barren land in western Queens, the new historic district consists of a series of nine “courts” or rows of townhouses and nine small apartment buildings (four to six stories tall), built on all or part of 16 blocks, a total of 624 buildings. The district also includes the Phipps Garden Apartment buildings (two courtyard apartment buildings constructed in 1932 and 1935) and Sunnyside Park, one of only two private parks in New York City.

This huge complex is one of the most significant planned residential communities in New York City and has achieved international recognition for its low-rise, low density housing arranged around landscaped open courtyards. Built by the City Housing Corporation following the tenets of the Regional Plan Association of America, the development’s architects Clarence Stein, Henry Wright and Frederick Ackerman set to work creating a neighborhood that would uphold the ideal of “health, open space, greenery, and idyllic living for all.” This enlightened ethic has had lasting effects, as Sunnyside Gardens continues – like many of the city’s historic districts – to be home to a diverse and dedicated community of residents and homeowners.

The designers, working within the preordained street grid, built rows of simplified Colonial Revival or Art Deco style homes near the perimeter of each block allowing for central, open courtyards. The buildings only covered 28% of the land leaving an unprecedented amount of open space in a working-class, city neighborhood. Beyond promoting physical health, these shared garden spaces were to foster human interaction, creating a sense of neighborhood cohesiveness seemingly lost in other parts of modern life. In addition to the buildings, many elements of the original landscape, including large street trees and some courtyard plantings are still extant.

The concepts developed at Sunnyside Gardens were improved and expanded at subsequent developments at Radburn, NJ and Chatham Village in Pittsburgh, as well as the greenbelt towns developed by the WPA. In addition to their physical design, the development was deliberately priced to make the buildings more available to low-income families while still providing high quality homes . Other efforts of the RPAA included the creation of new concepts to guide urban growth that included open space preservation. The ideas of this group led to new state and national planning and housing policies and laws that encouraged greater equity in housing production, location and design.

For more information, see http://www.hdc.org/neighborhoodatrisksunnyside.htm

Monday, June 25, 2007

Some Sunnyside Residents Continue to Complain

Some people are never happy. That a city agency is checking its work with citizens and residents should be applauded, not derided. And what's not being reported here is the fact that LPC had been chased away during their surveys by some of the same people now complaining.

June 24, 2007
Sunnyside
Who’s Calling That a Peaked Roof?
By JEFF VANDAM

Last fall, employees of the Landmarks Preservation Commission began canvassing the streets of Sunnyside Gardens, a small enclave in western Queens, armed with pens, notepads and cameras. Their goal was to record detailed descriptions of the area’s tidy red-brick 1920s row houses — mostly Art Deco and colonial revival, some with bay windows and peaked roofs — in preparation for a decision on whether to designate the area as a historic district that is set for Tuesday.

Yet when residents of the 624 houses that fall within the proposed district received the commission’s descriptions, some saw inaccuracies in what would become a permanent record of their homes. The agency has received about 40 letters from homeowners who fear that if the district is designated, they may get into trouble down the line for adding features that had been there all along.

“I panicked,” said Nancy Mangan, a lifelong Sunnyside Gardens resident who lives on 48th Street. She wrote to the agency that her house does indeed have a storm door, there is a light above that door, and a curb bordering her garden is made of scalloped green brick, not concrete.

The residents’ complaints were reported last week in The Times Ledger, a chain of weekly newspapers.

According to a spokeswoman for the landmarks commission, the complaints and revisions are part of the process. The spokeswoman, Lisi de Bourbon, explained that the agency’s employees could see houses only from the vantage point of public property like sidewalks and could not always get an up-close view.

But Ira Greenberg, a lawyer for the Preserve Sunnyside Gardens Coalition, a group that opposes the historic district because of the restrictions that would be placed on construction, sees the inaccuracies as a sign that the designation is more trouble than it is worth.

Mr. Greenberg has made several corrections to the description of the three-story house, with a peaked roof covered with slate shingles, in which he has lived for 12 years, including the fact that his basement windows do not have three panes apiece.

“As we go through this process,” he said, “it reminds me that it doesn’t make much sense.”

Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

Friday, June 22, 2007

Upcoming Designations at LPC

In case you missed it, at the LPC's public hearing/meeting on Tuesday, June 26;
there's a vote scheduled for the Sunnyside Historic District at 9:30am, followed by a vote on the Crotona PlayCenter & Interior. Then there's a public hearing on Domino Sugar where testimony will be taken. See http://www.nyc.gov/html/lpc/downloads/pdf/calendar/06_26_07.pdf for details.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Report from Marathon Hearing on Sunnyside Gardens

From the Queens Chronicle (a truthful albeit a little too fairhanded take on Tuesday's hearing)

Landmarking Opinions From Both Sunny Sides
by Jennifer Manley, Assistant Editor

In three-minute increments, Sunnyside Gardens residents bent the ears of the city’s Landmarks Preservation commissioners for nearly five hours on Tuesday.

“We are here today not to talk, but to listen,” said commission Chairman Robert Tierney, kicking off the marathon of comments on a plan that could designate the neighborhood a historic district. It was the last chance residents had to voice their opinion before the commission makes a decision. Everyone who signed up and stayed had a chance to speak.

The first, a 19-year resident, opened with a sentiment common on both sides of the divide. “I love my neighborhood,” said Christine Hunter, who called it a “striking example” of smart urban planning and a place the Landmarks Preservation Commission “should have jurisdiction over.”

Jeremy Keraken, a landmarks supporter, followed with a humorous tale of stumbling upon “a place that sounds like a cemetery or a sanitarium” and discovering a place of “human scale properties where people smiled at each other.”

Eighty-three people followed, 58 of them speaking for and 25 of them speaking against landmarking. While most echoed Hunter and Keraken’a deep appreciation for the unique neighborhood, not all agreed that a city agency should be charged with safeguarding and directing its future. The commission was accused of being “insulting,” “parochial” and “self-appointed style police.”

Miriam Allen, an urban planner and opponent of landmarking said, “having outside interests dictate what we should do with our properties is wrong.”

Others objected on the grounds that the existing rules are sufficient. Resident Ira Greenberg put it this way: “We need a dress code, zoning; not a uniform, landmarking.”

Marked by modest, low-rise brick row houses joined by common rear gardens, Sunnyside Gardens was designed by Henry Wright and Clarence Stein and built in the 1920s for middle- and working-class people.

It has served as a model of planned garden living for other neighborhoods, as an educational model for architecture students, and a place of inspiration and recipient of praise from social commentators, from Louis Mumford to Eleanor Roosevelt, who was quoted most dramatically on Tuesday by resident and actress Jodie Lynn McClintock.

The opposition contended, however, that landmarking would drive up property values, taxes and the cost of maintenance, undermining the designers’ intent.

One 43-year resident, Roberta Gebhardt, recalled her husband working two jobs so they could afford to build the life they envisioned in the gardens. “Landmarking will destroy that dream,” she added.

Another speaker urged the commission “Do not elevate our community out of the reach of its current residents.”

While both sides claimed that a majority of residents were behind them in the debate, speakers in favor of landmarking on Tuesday outnumbered opponents by more than a 2-1 ratio. Many offered written and oral comments from others who couldn’t attend, the vast majority of which favored the designation.

Several speaking against landmarking remarked that they would like to explore alternatives, using more community input. While several European immigrants came out in favor, the majority of South Asian residents spoke against it. Badruh Khan said he spoke for many of his Bangladeshi neighbors when he said “no one has been listening to us.” He urged the commission, “If you love the diversity of Sunnyside, don’t landmark.”

On the other side of the debate, some said time was of the essence and landmarking is truly the only way to preserve the attributes cited by both camps. Bliss Street resident Patricia Dorfman riffed a bit on the reverie offered to her neighborhood’s past, describing her home as a “brick dollhouse” built by “1920s do-gooders,” but went on to urge the commission to move before it was too late. “We have never been this close to saving the gardens,” she said.

Support for the district also came from Assemblywoman Margaret Markey (D-Elmhurst), Borough President Helen Marshall — who said she is “most definitely in favor”— and the Greater Astoria and Richmond Hill historical societies.

During the hearing, opponents lobbed some serious charges across the proverbial aisle, including unethical money-making, slander and spying. Resident John Ward warned that the commission could be facing a “protracted legal fight” if it moves forward.

According to Mark Silberman, the commission’s legal counsel, landmarking decisions are sometimes challenged but a historic district has never been overturned in court.

There is no time frame on the commission’s decision and a vote has not been scheduled, a commission spokeswoman said Wednesday.

Friday, April 13, 2007

PRESERVATION EMERGENCY: Landmarks Hearing on Sunnyside Gardens, Tuesday, 17th at 2:00 pm

HDC exhorts everyone who cares about landmarking to attend the Landmarks Preservation Commission’s public designation hearing of Sunnyside Gardens this Tuesday, April 17th at 2:00pm in the Municipal Building, at Centre and Chambers Streets, 9th Floor North.

As you have no doubt heard, the road just to get to this hearing has not been an easy one for this landmark-worthy district. Radical elements in the community have mounted a very public assault on the designation process. Despite the support of hundreds of neighbors in favor of landmarking, the designation of this nationally-important development as a New York City Historic District is far from certain. A very strong preservation presence is imperative to this process.

If this designation does not pass due to the race-baiting gutter politics of its opponents, it may have terrible implications for future preservation efforts throughout the city. As concerned New Yorkers, we must let the Commission know there is strong support for their mission of landmarking worthy areas throughout the five boroughs.

Even though Queens is physically the city’s largest borough, it only has six city historic districts (two of which are only one block long and another is on government-owned land). This is not due to a lack of historically and architecturally significant areas – 24 districts in Queens are on the National Register of Historic Places, including Sunnyside Gardens. The designation of Sunnyside Gardens would increase the number of city landmarked properties in Queens by over 30% and could boost the likelihood of more. A failed bid for a district however, could send a negative message to the city’s administration and might hinder future designations in the borough.

Sunnyside Gardens was developed between 1924 and 1928 in response to a growing need for quality housing for middle and low-income workers and their families. The complex consists of a series of nine “courts” or rows of townhouses and nine small apartment buildings, built on all or part of 16 blocks. Spread among nearly 54 acres, Sunnyside Gardens has a total of approximately 610 buildings. This huge complex is one of the most significant planned residential communities in New York City and has achieved international recognition for its low-rise, low-density housing arranged around landscaped open courtyards. Noted historian, architectural critic and resident Lewis Mumford called the neighborhood “an exceptional community laid out by people who were deeply human and who gave the place a permanent expression of that humanness.” (For LPC’s full description of the district go to http://nyc.gov/html/lpc/downloads/pdf/sig/info_sgg.pdf and for more information, go to http://www.hdc.org/neighborhoodatrisksunnyside.htm).

Tuesday’s hearing starts at 2:00 pm at the Municipal Building at 1 Centre Street, 9th floor. at the corner of Centre Street and Chambers Street, across from City Hall, in Manhattan. For directions, see http://www.nyc.gov/html/lpc/html/contact/contact.shtml. If you are planning to visit the agency, please make sure to bring photo ID. You may not be let into the building without photo ID. Even if you do not wish to testify, your presence speaks volumes. If you are willing to read the testimony of someone unable to attend the hearing, please let us know.

If you are unable to attend the hearing, your support still matters. Please send an email in favor of landmarking Sunnyside Gardens to LPC Chair Robert Tierney at comments@lpc.nyc.gov. See below for a sample letter.


Hon. Robert Tierney, Chair
Landmarks Preservation Commission
The Municipal Building, 9th Floor
One Centre Street
New York, NY 10007
comments@lpc.nyc.gov

Dear Commissioner Tierney,

I am writing in strong support of the landmark designation of the proposed Sunnyside Gardens Historic District. The Sunnyside Gardens complex is one of the most significant planned residential communities in New York City and has achieved international recognition for its low-rise, low-density housing arranged around landscaped open courtyards. This design by architects Clarence Stein and Henry Wright was one of the first American adaptations of Ebenezer Howard’s innovative “garden city” concept and served as a precursor to acclaimed later developments in Radburn, N.J. and Chatham Village in Pittsburgh. The neighborhood is characterized by a gentle and distinct humane scale and details which urbanist and resident Lewis Mumford described as “a permanent expression of…humanness.”

This neighborhood, which has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places, is truly deserving of New York City historic district status. I support the Landmarks Commission’s action in bringing this forward for consideration, and urge the LPC to designate this worthy district.

Sincerely,


Your Name

Roundup on Landmarks Issues

Posted on Queens Crap (to which we're incredbily thankful for their eagle eye and patience in monitoring the flood that is Thursday's local media coverage)

Landmarking: Pro & Con

From Queens Courier:Many questions — no answers (about the Broadway-Flushing landmark bid)

A response from Councilman Avella: Clarifying the Constitution

Letter to the Times Ledger: Why landmarking threatens

In Douglaston Hill:After Major Renovations: Home Still Deemed Historic Enough

A story about the Sunnyside saga:Landmark battle intensifies

A pro-landmarking editorial from the Tribune:Protect Our Past

And a pro-landmarking letter to the editor from the Brooklyn Star:Rethinking McCarren Pool's Landmark Status

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Sunnyside Hearing is Coming Up, and the community media is still finding fun in conflict

From the Times-Ledger

04/12/2007
Landmark battle intensifies
By Adam Pincus

Days before a critical public hearing, both opponents and advocates of a proposal to landmark Sunnyside Gardens are optimistic about their chances of winning the fight over creating a historic district in the tree-shaded neighborhood, but at least one political figure appears to be squirming.

Miriam Allen, a homeowner in Sunnyside Gardens since 2000, has been an urban planner for 30 years.

She was optimistic that the proposal would be denied and was critical of the process.

Dan Allen, an architect not related to Miriam, who has lived in the area since 1992, was equally vehement that ultimately the proposal would be approved.

But Borough President Helen Marshall, who had written a letter in support of the proposal, was now "listening with both ears," according to her spokesman Dan Andrews.

Both Allens - and many other residents - plan to attend a public hearing at 2 p.m. April 17 sponsored by Landmarks Preservation Commission at the Conference Room at 1 Centre Street, 9th floor, in Manhattan, to get comment from residents on the proposal that has brought frayed nerves to the neighborhood.

The proposal is to consider creating a historic district in the approximately 610 buildings, most built between 1924 and 1928, in Sunnyside Gardens, in the urban nook between the Sunnyside Rail Yards and Queens Boulevard.

Critics such as Miriam Allen said the area did not need to be landmarked because it was already protected by the Special Planned Community Preservation District created in 1974 that requires review and approval from the city for major changes, although many small changes such as curb cuts have slipped through.

"It is up to the city to coordinate better between the Department of Buildings and City Planning," she said.

Dan Allen said "I am optimistic. The worth of Sunnyside Gardens is not in question. I do think we have strong support."

He said that in the debate some facts have been distorted or left out. He said homeowners fretting over repair costs could use grants and loans available for homeowners through the Historic Properties Fund and the New York Landmarks Conservancy.

Andrews said the borough president was concerned about issues raised by opponents to the landmarking and had asked the Landmarks Preservation Commission to delay the hearing or move it to Queens, but the commission demurred.

Marshall's position on the issue, which initially appeared firm after she sent a letter in support of landmarking, appeared to shift after meeting with a group of vocal opponents March 30.

"She is listening with both ears," Andrews said." She is not walking away from the letter but is seeing if something could be done that was more amenable to the opponents."

Residents are also waiting for a survey by City Councilman Eric Gioia (D-Sunnyside) who told attendees at a March 10 public meeting of landmark opponents that he would conduct. He said he would send a letter to all homeowners in the proposed district so they could send their opinion back. The proposal drew applause from the audience, but nothing has been sent yet.

Reach reporter Adam Pincus by e-mail at news@timesledger.com or by phone at 718-229-0300, Ext. 154.

From Gotham Gazette - http://www.gothamgazette.com/article/landuse/20070411/12/2145

Sunnyside Fights Over What to Preserve
by Tom Angotti
11 Apr 2007

Residents in Sunnyside, Queens are facing off against each other over how best to preserve the historic Sunnyside Gardens housing development. And the fight may be more about who will be able to live in Sunnyside than the buildings that those people will live in.

On April 17, the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission will hold a public hearing on its proposal to create an historic district including 16 city blocks and 610 buildings in what would be the largest historic district in Queens. The townhouses and apartment buildings in the district were built in the 1920s and 1930s by architects Clarence Stein and Henry Wright, following the precepts of British planner Ebenezer Howard. Howard proposed building “Garden Cities” with abundant open space to provide housing for working class households in a communitarian environment. They were intended as an alternative to congested industrial cities. The Garden City idea is influential, but Sunnyside is one of only a few examples actually built in New York City or anywhere in the nation.

The Preservation District
Sunnyside is already protected from redevelopment pressures by a Special Planned Community Preservation District. In this district, created in 1974, anyone who wants to take down or build any structure, enclose a porch, enlarge a home or put in a garage, driveway or curb cut must obtain a special permit. It also protects Sunnyside’s unique common areas and gardens; permission is required to remove a tree.

To obtain these special permits, the property owner must apply to the Department of City Planning and prepare an environmental assessment. The application then goes through the city’s Uniform Land Use Review Procedure, requiring public hearings and votes by the local community board, borough president, City Planning Commission and City Council. Some property owners have complained that the process is too time consuming and costly. So, for the last several years, the local community board had been working with the Queens city planning Ofoice to address these concerns.

A Landmark District
Some residents of Sunnyside believe the zoning district has proved successful. “The zoning district has worked to protect the most significant element of the neighborhood, the open space,” said Hunter College professor Susan Turner-Meiklejohn, who live in Sunnyside and opposes the landmarks designation. “The key goals of the Garden City were not architectural but social,” said Turner-Meiklejohn who has done extensive research on the community. And in any event, she said, Sunnyside is “not an architectural masterpiece.”

But the Sunnyside Gardens Preservation Alliance, which backs the landmarks proposal, believes that the historic district would provide additional protection for the area. Jeffrey Kroessler, a landmark proponent, complains that the current zoning district “doesn’t protect the aesthetic qualities of the buildings.” Some supporters also feel the landmarks procedures would be less cumbersome than those in the special zoning district.

Kroessler, who is also a founder of the Queensboro Preservation League and a recent Sunnyside arrival, sees another advantage to the landmarking: It would move the landmarks commission away from its Manhattan-centric focus. Queens now has only six designated historic districts, a mere fraction of the city’s total.

But the Preserve Sunnyside Gardens Coalition, which opposes the landmarks designation, worries about the costs landmarks regulations would place on building owners. Coalition member Ira Greenberg told the Queens Tribune that replacing a slate roof as required by Landmarks would cost him some $45,000, over 10 times the usual cost.

What to Preserve?
The dispute in Sunnyside Gardens is in many respects a debate over what aspect of a community deserves protection. Those opposing the landmarking argue that it would preserve architectural details such as roofs, windows, doors and facades times but would make the housing there unaffordable to the moderate-income working class population that is at the core of the Garden City concept. Affordability, they say, is what most deserves to be preserved.

In a heated exchange on WNYC radio’s Brian Lehrer show with landmarks proponent Kroessler, Turner-Meiklejohn asserted that recent demographic changes in the neighborhood have a lot to do with the landmarks proposal. With over 50 percent of the population foreign-born, the non-Hispanic white population is now only around 40 percent, and the social base for new restrictions is in that minority of “old-timers.”

But Kroessler denies that ethnicity or race has anything to do with the matter. He says that housing prices have already been going up in the neighborhood and that has nothing to do with the proposed historic district designation. (Studies have shown that property values tend to be higher in landmark districts).

However, Kroessler did tell the Queens Tribune, “Over the past few years there have been individuals who have done illegal work on their homes and have ‘uglified’ their property.”

The argument in Sunnyside reflects a debate taking place throughout Queens, where some resident blame working class immigrants for changes in the urban landscape. Justified concerns about out-of-context building conversions often get mixed with disdain for new foreign-born residents. Crackdowns on building violations and demands for downzoning sometimes target the new populations instead of trying to accommodate them and go after the violators.

While it is a good idea to have strict but sensible regulations that promote good design and aesthetically pleasing neighborhoods, there is a fascination and a value in the immense variety of ways that people alter and decorate their homes. Some of these efforts are beautiful, others are mediocre, and still others are incredibly ugly. The shapes, colors and textures go from glorious to garish. But that is what makes a walk down a New York street exciting.

Tom Angotti is Professor of Urban Affairs and Planning at Hunter College, City University of NY, editor of Progressive Planning Magazine, and a member of the Task Force on Community-based Planning.

Gotham Gazette - http://www.gothamgazette.com/article/landuse/20070411/12/2145

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Sunnyside Designation Hearing Approaching

From the Queens Chronicle

Landmarks Will Hear Case For Sunnyside
by Jennifer Manley, Assistant Editor
04/05/2007

After several contentious meetings, residents divided over the proposed landmarking of Sunnyside Gardens will get to argue their case before the commission who will decide their fate. A public hearing of the Landmarks Preservation Commission is scheduled for Tuesday April 17, at 2 p.m. in the commission offices at 1 Centre Street in Manhattan.

Opponents of the designation have objected to the time and place of the hearing on several occasions, noting that it is inconvenient for working Queens residents. The landmarks group has consistently rejected their calls for a change of venue, citing the commission’s voluntary nature and several other items on the agenda. It would also be nearly unprecedented, as the commission hasn’t held a public hearing — even on a controversial district — outside its offices in over a decade. Opponents are also unlikely to convince the commission to delay the meeting as they have asked.

“The public hearing is going to be held on the seventeenth. Notifications have already gone out” said commission spokeswoman Elisabeth de Bourbon. While Borough President Helen Marshal reportedly asked the commission to consider a delay after she met with opponents, she has already sent a letter to the Landmarks Preservation Commission in support of the designation.

Opponents of landmarking, a once informal group of residents now organized as the Sunnyside Gardens Coalition, are also hoping to assemble a working group of residents on both sides of the issue to seek common ground on how to preserve the neighborhood without necessarily getting the designation.

Pro-landmarking resident and member of the Sunnyside Gardens Preservation Alliance Jeffrey Kroessler is not interested in finding new options. “It should be clear by now that for anyone interested in the preservation of Sunnyside Gardens, there is no alterative to designation as a historic district. Anyone who keeps talking about other options ... is just mistaken,” he said.

While the process leading up to designation requires public hearings, it does not require a vote by residents. There have been four public meetings in Sunnyside and the commission says it has been open to questions and criticism. “We’ve been very accessible to anyone who has a position on this issue,” de Bourbon said. She added that commission Chairman Robert Tierney has accepted an invitation to meet with opponents the day prior to the hearing. The vote on designation, which must be won by a simple majority of the 11 commissioners, could come within weeks of the public hearing.

For those unable to make it to the hearing, testimony can be submitted in writing either by mail to the Landmarks Preservation Commission, 1 Centre St., 9th Floor, New York, NY 10007, or via e-mail to comments@lpc.nyc.gov. All comments will become part of the record and will be seen by the commissioners prior to the hearing.

©Queens Chronicle 2007

From the Daily News
Some don't see Sunnyside to rezoning

BY WARREN WOODBERRY JR.
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Posted Thursday, April 5th 2007, 4:00 AM

Forty years ago, John and Sandra Fitzgibbon immigrated from Ireland and achieved the American dream when they bought their Sunnyside Gardens home.

John, 67, worked three jobs so his wife Sandra and their seven children could live in the two-family house off 48th St.

"We were looking to buy a house and no place would take us because we had children. It was affordable at the time," said Sandra, 68.

Today the senior couple help raise seven grandchildren where three generations have called Sunnyside Gardens home. But a City Landmarks Preservation Commission proposal to turn their neighborhood into a historical district, has the Fitzgibbon family worried they could lose their home.

"We don't want this thing," said John. "I don't need anybody banging on my door telling me what to do to my house."

Area homeowners say they don't want to become custodians in their own homes, and they worry that a rise in property taxes and strict regulations for maintaining their properties will force them out.

If approved by the commission, Sunnyside Gardens would become the largest historic district in Queens.

"We do our best to listen to everyone's comments and respond to their questions prior to a vote by the commission," said spokeswoman Elisabeth de Bourbon. "The next step of the process is a public hearing, which will be held before the full, 11-member Commission on April 17."

The proposal has pitted neighbor against neighbor, with some wanting the prestigious designation, while others fear they'll be slapped with building code violations by the city Department of Buildings.

New homeowner Jimmy Van Bramer said he's for landmarking. Three years after Van Bramer and his partner rented a home in Sunnyside Gardens, the two decided to purchase one in January.

"I am for it," said Van Bramer, 37, who works in governmental affairs for a nonprofit. "I believe that Sunnyside Gardens is a beautiful historic neighborhood that is worthy of landmark status. I think the vast majority of people are in favor of it."

Sunnyside Gardens is situated between Queens Blvd. and the Sunnyside rail yard, and homes in the area range in price from $600,000 to $900,000. In 1984, the neighborhood was added to the National Register of Historic Places.

The community was built between 1924 and 1928 with 1,202 homes on 55 acres just 15 minutes from Manhattan. Each block forms a common garden or landscaped court.

It is already designated a special planned community preservation district, a status that was conferred in 1974 and does not allow for new development, demolition or substantial alteration to a property without permission.

Councilman Eric Gioia (D-Sunnyside) said his office will mail questionnaires to homeowners asking what they want the neighborhood to look like in 10 years, and what is the best way to get there.

"My goal is to build a consensus and to build common ground between the two sides," said Gioia.

wwoodberry@nydailynews.com

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Sunnyside Residents Speak

From the Queens Chronicle

Don’t Landmark Sunnyside

Dear Editor:

Regarding the lack of debate in Sunnyside Gardens over the Special Planned Community Preservation District now in place and the push by a small group to landmark the district.Many of us who found out about landmarking at the first government meeting on Nov. 29 thought we were in the middle of researching, discussing and finding answers about how best to preserve the neighborhood. Instead, our voices were cut off when the Landmarks Preservation Commission decided to listen to outsiders who are preservation experts in other neighborhoods, and to a small group of residents spreading fears of overdevelopment, and to calendar Sunnyside Gardens on March 6 while we were in the middle of this process.

Many homeowners and renters are still just learning about the complex issues at hand. Homeowners in the Bengali community have literally been shut out of the process and only came to a public meeting on Feb. 27 because a few of us reached out to them. After three months of research and meetings with two people from City Planning, with four people from the Landmarks Preservation Commission, with two lawyers, three preservationists and six urban planners, it is my deep belief that we would be better protected from overdevelopment with an adjustment to the current PC District regulation, and we would be better able to exist as a community of people, not just houses and buildings, by having continued open dialogues and debates.

I asked the commission, the City Council and the community board for translation of announcements back in December for homeowners who are not proficient in English. This request acknowledges that in Queens, we are in the most diverse locality in the United States, and that while I know many immigrants who speak several languages including English, there are also homeowners who are not proficient in English. Several of us have experience and expertise in reaching out to non-English speakers and in how to organize simultaneous translation. Our requests have fallen on deaf ears at the commission, our community board and our City Council.

We are calling for Landmarks to stop this process and for the community to have an open public debate on the detailed and complex issues of zoning and regulation. We have an alternative proposal and we would like to present it in an effort to not only address issues in Sunnyside Gardens but to begin a discussion about the greater Sunnyside community.

Judith Sloan,
Sunnyside

Landmark Sunnyside

Dear Editor:

As a resident of Sunnyside Gardens for over 11 years and a homeowner here for eight and a half years, I have come to love and greatly appreciate the unique character and ambiance of the neighborhood. It offers a quality of life and a sense of place that is rare in New York City and is something I would not ever want to see disappear.

Unfortunately, during the years I have been fortunate to live here, I have seen changes take place to many of the homes and more important, to the gardens that are not respectful of the character of the neighborhood. Extensions that are out of scale and do not match the design of the homes, along with numerous driveways and parking spaces that have been added, despite the fact that they are not allowed under current guidelines for the neighborhood. If these changes continue, Sunnyside Gardens will be gardens in name only.

While the gardens are a Special Preservation District, anyone who takes the time to stroll through the entire neighborhood will see countless examples of changes that violate, not only the spirit, but also the letter of the law of the district. It is for this reason I support wholeheartedly the designation of Sunnyside Gardens as a Landmark District.

Such a designation will offer many benefits. One of the most important and one that will greatly reduce the number of violations, is the fact that new and prospective residents will know that the has been designated a landmark neighborhood. Currently, many who buy homes here are not made aware of the rules that exist within the Preservation District. This has resulted in many of the problems we face today, and in many unpleasant situations where owners have made a change or started to, only to find out after the fact that what they have done is not allowed.

While some fear the intrusion of a government agency into the process, the rules that will be put in place — with community input I should add — will be far clearer and the process for getting approval for any desired changes, far easier and much faster than is currently the case.

Arthur Pearson,
Sunnyside

There is going to be a Public Hearing on the designation at LPC on April 17 at 2pm.
You can read about it in English, Spanish, Chinese & Bengali:

Public Hearing to be held on April 17
Una audiencia pública el martes 17 de abril
Chinese Translation - Public Hearing April 17
Bengali Translation - Public Hearing April 17