Monday, February 3, 2020

First sign of the tech hub — aka Zero Irving — above ground on 14th Street



Foundation work started last August here on 14th Street at Irving Place ... at the future home of the recently rebranded tech hub.

As you can see, the structure — now known as Zero Irving — is rising above the street level ...



The building, developed jointly by the city’s Economic Development Corp. and RAL Development Services, will top out at 21 floors... featuring Civic Hall, which will offer digital skills for low-income residents, as well as market-rate retail, office space and a food hall.

RAL announced the rebranding back in October. In the news release, the developers describe this as being "in the epicenter of Midtown South."

"This is exactly what we said about this plan, and what we feared — it’s intended to transform our neighborhoods into Midtown South," Andrew Berman, executive director of Village Preservation, told Curbed in a statement back in October. "The zero in 'ZERO IRVING' represents what neighbors and the public got out of this deal, while those who donated generously to the Mayor reap 100 percent of the benefits."



In recent weeks, several EVG readers have noted that the active work site — which sees a steady stream of concrete trucks running in and out of the site — has encroached further onto 14th Street...





In July 2018, during a televised hearing, the reps for the developer promised that all demolition and construction work would be done within the bounds of the property.

The project, championed by Mayor de Blasio and initially announced in early 2017, passed through the city’s Uniform Land Use Review Process earlier in 2018, capped off by a unanimous City Council vote — led by local Councilmember Carlina Rivera — in August 2018. A rezoning was required to build the the structure, which is larger than what current commercial zoning allows.

The approval came despite the pleas of some residents, activists, small-business owners and community groups who had long expressed concern that the rezoning necessary for the project would spur out-of-scale development on surrounding blocks.

These concerns have not abated.

Back in the fall, the city released its plan to add a requirement that new hotels in Greenwich Village and the East Village south of Union Square must receive a special permit from the City Planning Commission and City Council in order to be built. Critics of the plan reportedly contend that this may instead speed up the development of office buildings in the neighborhood. The City Planning Commission is expected to sign off on the plan in the weeks ahead before it moves to City Council.

The new building, on the former site of a P.C. Richard & Son, has a completion date for the spring of 2021, per the renderings onsite.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks a lot Carlina.

Anonymous said...

BIG YECH!

Will said...

This is a job incubator space for nonprofits and startups, that the community board originally asked for and something that the Mayor actually delivered on. I'm happy it's here and even happier that the GVSHP wasn't able to hold it hostage for an *unrelated* downzoning.

Anonymous said...

@9:25am: So, you're pleased the neighborhood was sold out? You're pleased that Rivera lied? You're happy to have the neighborhood become "Midtown South"? Wow...

Anonymous said...

@9:25am: You actually BELIEVE this will be an 'incubator for nonprofits & startups'? Can you be that naive?? If so, I have a bridge to sell you.

Open your eyes and see what is really going on here.

Anonymous said...

9.25 AM is a REBNY shill.

In fact, Rivera, Chin, and Powers are ALL REBNY shills. As is the entire NYC CC and, of course, BdB aka Bloomberg 2.0.

Sad.

Anonymous said...

Not only do we have to thank Carolina Rivera and Mayor DeDorkio for this eyesore, we also have to thank them both for standing behind the impending demolition of the East River Park. Good times!

noble neolani said...

@8:25 AM

And any other pro-developer and pro-midtown-southers, this is a developer's Trojan Horse, inside this deal was the unnecessary change to the area's zoning laws. The building could have been the 4-5 floors smaller and still fulfilled its purples with room to spare.

Anonymous said...

The "neighborhood" already is midtown south - which is actually a police precinct so we'll need different branding. And of course DeBlasio made his cronies money, he's dancing with who brought him to the party. The "never build another big building" crowd is almost always going to lose unless it involves million dollar sight-lines in MidtownClassic™ As graft goes this is standard not that egregious big city stuff - see: History of Manhattan. What exactly is a "tech incubator". A bland and empty phrase without even any good humor available. You mean office space right? Or a bunch of midwestern marketing majors in petri dishes?

The real outrage is the East River Pile of Dirt. A preposterous useless cash grab.

Jill W. said...

Zero Irving? Don't you mean Carlina's Techhub™?

Anonymous said...

That is so terrible to walk and they constantly block a lane or even two of the famed 14th Street busway, absurd the giveaway of this public land that the council member rivera aided and abetted. Then sold out our East River park and then voted for more jails.

Anonymous said...

See people mention the historic society, this is an incredible document they put together with FOILed records about the corrupt and biased process for selecting RAL. The Y proposed to use the site, The New School, a Museum and others all put in better offers. All without the mammoth commercial, not residential, upzoning. https://www.gvshp.org/_gvshp/pdf/Picking%20Favorites%20The%2014th%20Street%20Tech%20Hub%20Complete%20Report%20NYCEDC%20RFP%20Comparison%20Union%20Square.pdf