Opinion: EDC’s Plan for Red Hook is a Boon for Developers

The difficulty with EDC s plan is that bulk Red Hook residents were never given an opportunity to have in-depth discussions backed by independent technical research and assistance about the future of the society City and state administrators announcing plans to redevelop Red Hook s Brooklyn Marine Terminal last year Caroline Rubinstein-Willis Mayoral Photography Office The City s Economic Enhancement Corporation an agency under Mayor Eric Adams office in the past few days circulated a plan to redevelop Brooklyn s Red Hook waterfront with majority market-rate housing while purportedly stabilizing the limited port facilities that are left there That plan has met with a good deal of skepticism and outright opposition from Red Hook residents and several key elected authorities The difficulty with EDC s plan is that largest part Red Hook residents were never given an opportunity to have in-depth discussions backed by independent technical research and assistance about the future of the locality As a aftermath the mayor s plan if implemented may very well inflate economic and racial inequalities stimulate more upscale progress and displace more people than it is able to provide housing for I know this because in over two decades ago I was a senior planner with the Brooklyn Office of the City Planning Department and main advisor to Neighborhood Board as it completed the neighborhood s first neighborhood plan Red Hook A Plan for Region Regeneration one of the first group plans that went on to be approved by the City Planning Commission I worked closely for almost two years with Neighborhood Board and its appointed subcommittee that included residents nonprofits and business representatives Among the countless neighborhood conditions that residents then saw as problematic were lack of constituents access to the waterfront and the racial and class divisions partially corresponding to the divides between population housing and other renters and homeowners It is clear that these divides still exist It is also clear to me that EDC s plan would only exacerbate these historic divisions First of all it would create a new segregated enclave of mostly upscale private housing on the waterfront Secondly it would spur additional speculative land value increases that will spark demand for even more private housing displace tenants and further isolate other commercial waterfront uses and society housing Third it proposes to encourage limited waterfront commercial growth without solid solutions to the growing problems of last-mile deliveries traffic congestion waste management and access to general transit I strongly urge residents business owners Group Board and all elected functionaries including those who will soon take office to stop EDC s rush towards approval of the plan The next city administration should make a fresh start in the spirit of the ground-breaking population plan That plan took time two years and it was worth it I am convinced that genuine region engagement is capable of yielding creative new ideas and plans across generations that lead to transformative changes Tom Angotti Ph D us an urban planning and procedures enhancement professor emeritus at CUNY s Hunter College and The Graduate Center and an adjunct professor at Parsons The New School The post Opinion EDC s Plan for Red Hook is a Boon for Developers appeared first on City Limits