| Newsday
Arverne Renewal To Begin In June
Two developers picked to undertake project
December 4, 2001
By Merle English
City officials yesterday tapped two Long Island developers to undertake
the $350 million development of Arverne-by-the-Sea, a 100-acre oceanfront
community in the Rockaways. At a City Hall news conference, Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani and other city officials said that a plan by Benjamin-Beechwood
LLC, a joint venture, was selected from among several competitive
proposals for the Arverne renewal area, bounded by the Rockaway
Freeway, Beach 32nd, Beach 74th and Beach 81st Streets.
The project, on which construction is slated to begin in June, would
include: 2,300 middle-income, residential units in a mix of one-
and two-family homes with some mid-rise apartment buildings. Purchasers
of homes would be selected by a lottery run by the Department of
Housing Preservation & Development. Up to 250,000 square feet of
commercial and retail space. A 30,000-square-foot community recreation
center. A charter school for up to 800 students in kindergarten
through eighth grade.
The Benjamin-Beechwood venture, a joint undertaking of housing developers
Benjamin Development of Garden City and the Beechwood Organization
of Jericho, will obtain private financing for the development.
"This has been a dream for 30 or 40 years," said Jerilyn Perine,
commissioner of the city Department of Housing Preservation and
Development. "We don't get to see this too much in New York City,
because large expanses of vacant land are exceedingly rare." The
community will not "have any parallel anywhere in the city," Perine
added, "and [will] bring the ocean to our front door." "Moving forward
with this ambitious initiative, especially in light of the recent
tragedy in Belle Harbor, sends a strong message that the city is
committed to bringing important new projects to Queens and the Rockaways,"
Giuliani said in a prepared statement.
The Rockaway community lost nearly 100 residents in the World Trade
Center terror attack and five more on Nov. 12 when American Airlines
Flight 587 crashed in the neighborhood. Arverne-by-the-Sea takes
the place of a proposed $1-billion Technodome sports and recreation
project for the the 308-acre urban renewal site. Technodome was
sidelined because of financing uncertainties. Queens Borough President
Claire Shulman, Community Board 14, local organizations and residents
developed guidelines upon which the Arverne-by-the-Sea concept was
based.
"For a long time, we've been looking at the 300 acres to figure
out what can we do with them," Shulman said. "We now have a very
good proposal that we believe will give a shot in the arm to the
Rockaway peninsula and create housing we desperately need." The
"easy commute" to job centers and the unique oceanfront setting
"will make Arverne-by-the Sea one of New York's most desirable communities,"
Benjamin-Beechwood said in a statement.
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