Presentation Boards
Review the presentation boards shared during the workshop and provide your feedback directly on the materials.
Date: February 2, 2022
Location: Webinar via Zoom
Focus: We invite you to join our digital public meeting to discuss the future of Atlantic Yards. Join our Zoom webinar live to ask questions during the Q&A, or watch the replay on Youtube Live afterward. A recording of the session will be available here right after the session and online participation on our online posterboards will be available throughout.
Additional Comments? We want to hear from you!
General Feedback - Accountability
- Until at least 75% of the project’s affordable housing units have been completed, approval for any new building to begin construction must be contingent on its use of not less than 25% of its floor area for affordable apartments.
- Any future transfer of development rights to a parcel within the project must be approved subject to a binding public commitment by the transferee to provide the number of affordable apartments called out for that parcel in the then-current plan provided by the developers.
- Transfer of density from other locations in the project to Site 5 as part of a change to the general project plan must be contingent upon the developers engaging the community in a meaningful way regarding the design of the site prior to requesting any necessary modification to the Atlantic Yards General Project Plan.
- Programming for a modified Site 5 with increased density must include space for large community gatherings, to be administered by a non-profit steward not affiliated with project developers, or by a City cultural institution such as Brooklyn Public Library.
- Programming for a modified Site 5 must also include new, additional commitments for affordable housing targeting very low- and extremely low-income tenants who have been left behind by the Atlantic Yards housing completed to date.
- All eight acres of project open space obligations should be designated Public Park, Public Playground, Private Park, or Private Court, and plans developed for each condition in consultation with the community, with a schedule of incremental completions.
- The City must provide a system for collecting reports from community members of environmental impacts from construction. The developers must participate in this system so as to resolve the maximum number of reported complaints possible before enforcement by City agencies is required.
- The City must create and fund a Special Enforcement District bounded by a five-block radius around the project footprint. It should be staffed by a dedicated team of enforcement officers from select City agencies to manage the disruptions from ongoing construction development and arena event activity. The District will be an important administrative mechanism to reduce their negative impacts on residents’ quality of life. The enforcement team will be able to respond to reported incidents in real time, a long unmet community need. During the business hours, it will patrol the service area to monitor and enforce construction, parking, environmental, and health/safety violations. During arena events, the team will ticket illegal parking/loitering violations, provide traffic flow management and public safety.