On Tuesday, the Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) announced it had selected a joint venture partnership between for-profit and non-profit developers to build 175 units of income-targeted housing, a new library and other community space at the site of the current Inwood library.
The announcement comes as Inwood Community Board 12 prepares to vote on the city’s proposed Inwood rezoning, which would encourage increased commercial and residential development by allowing higher density in several areas of the neighborhood, while preserving neighborhood character in others. The city’s rezoning application also includes the disposition of the Inwood library site to a private developer for redevelopment.
Congressman Adriano Espaillat reacted swiftly in his own press release, calling the Inwood library plan “a Trojan Horse for Uptown,” arguing that “although the [rezoning] plan offers affordable units…what the City has offered is far from enough” and that “if this rezoning goes through as is, there will be a direct and indirect displacement of thousands of residents.” The congressman repeated his demand that the city commit to investing in the creation of 5,000 income-targeted units in Washington Heights and Inwood, preserve existing affordable housing and reduce the size of the rezoning area. Previously, the congressman has vocalized support for the Inwood library project in itself.
The joint venture is between Community League of the Heights, a non-profit community development organization based in Washington Heights, the company Ranger Properties, the community-development focused company Alembic and the youth-focused non-profit The Children’s Village. The project would be named “The Eliza,” after Eliza Hamilton, the wife of Alexander Hamilton and an early supporter of the library.
The developers have committed to using the Extremely Low Income and Low Income Affordability (ELLA) program. According to the press release, the building will target families making between $34,360 and $51,540 for a household of three (30 to 50 percent Area Median Income), while over 20 percent of the apartments will be affordable to households earning less than $26,000 for a family of three (30 percent AMI). The building will include units for homeless families as well. The new structure will also include amenities for residents, a preK facility, an Activities, Culture, Training Center that will host a variety of community programs, and a three-story “state-of-the-art” library. It would altogether be 14-stories tall.
“The selection of the winning bid for the development of the Inwood Library site is an important step as we go through the process of considering major changes to our community,” said local councilmember Ydanis Rodriguez in HPD’s press release. “As conversations progress, we will ensure that any proposed changes and new resources will benefit our community. They must expressly serve to strengthen District 10 residents, the small business community, our schools and job opportunities in booming fields. We deserve nothing less than the best.”
The press release includes further specifics about the library project, but though it mentions that a temporary library will be provided, it does not include any details on that facility. Replacing the library during its potential reconstruction has been a main concern for community members.
Some community members who support the alternative Uptown United Platform had asked that the land for the library be developed on a community land trust. Though HPD’s press release does not include any mention of such, it does note that the city will ensure the permanent affordability of the structure through the use of a legal tool called remainder interest that will give the city control over the future of the property. The New York Public Library will also maintain permanent ownership of the library.
Some community members have also argued that the Inwood library should go through its own public review process and be considered separately from the Inwood rezoning.
The board’s land-use committee meeting has been rescheduled from Wednesday March 7 to Thursday March 15, and the full board will vote on the rezoning on March 20. A full schedule of committee dates and locations can be viewed here.
Espaillat, meanwhile, has announced he will host a “Community Forum on Inwood Rezoning and 100 percent Affordable Housing” on Monday, March 12 from 6:30 pm to 8:30 pm at a location to be determined.
7 thoughts on “City Dishes Inwood Library Details, Espaillat Sees a ‘Trojan Horse’”
This is very much as predicted when the city started its top-down process to spot upzone the library to produce a much larger building (14 stories) than the NYPL’s own studies had recommended under existing zoning (9 stories). Normally spot zoning is illegal, but the city combined this with the Inwood EDC rezoning plan and extended the corner upzoning up to the library site to make it legal. The community was strongly against the upzoning, which is the first ever in North America for a library-housing redevelopment, but since zoning no longer matters under de Blasio the city was able to ram it through (the current ULURP is a formality — the city is not making any changes to their housing-at-any-cost strategy).
I’m a little confused by the 175 units on a site that can’t be much more than 17,000 SF. (Under 12,000 SF for the library, plus the parking lot of the adjacent school that was folded into it). With a mix of units surely this building is at least 150,000 SF+. The allowable FAR is only 7.2 even with the MIH bonus. How can they possibly fit this many units? Did they take some of the school’s open space in the back also? CityLimits, please find this out for us.
100% affordable housing is a “trojan horse?” Isn’t the library plan separate from the re-zoning plan, or has Espaillat forgotten? We’re being given a beautiful new library with truly affordable units for people who live in 10034, and he doesn’t trust it. Well I don’t trust him.
Please note: The Library plan is not a separate plan from the re-zoning plan.
mister sterling, you are exactly wrong — the inwood library project was folded into the city’s ‘inwood nyc’ plan to rezone the entire neighborhood. many community groups are calling for a separate ‘ULURP’ review process for the library, because it is truly a separate project. however, the way things are currently set up, the city is holding this project (and any meaningful community engagement about it…) hostage to try and jam down their top-down developer give-away that they’ve dressed up as a rezoning plan
The library project is actually a separate ULURP action that will be considered and voted on independently of the neighborhood rezoning, but it’s going through the approval process at the same time as the neighborhood rezoning.
How did HPD decide on this developer? How much money was given to BDB by this developer? Disclosure HPD
Were any of these planers ever north of 59th Street?
Don’t they know Inwood is a different world altogether
and wants no part of their warehousing schemes?
If this building goes up; you will realize that Inwood has no voice
whatsoever in its own wants and we should elect someone who does
to represent us.