Posted Nov 13, 2023, 11:30 AM
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NYC/NJ/Miami-Dade
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Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Riverview Estates Fairway (PA)
Posts: 45,926
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NEWARK, NJ | Iberia Phase 1 | FT | 30 + 30 + 20 + 20 FLOORS
Large-Scale Project To Replace Ironbound Restaurant Stirs Close-Knit Neighborhood
Quote:
Change is indeed inevitable. A proposed multi-million dollar project could dramatically re-stitch the fabric of Newark's close-knit Ironbound neighborhood. Therefore, it was equally inevitable that a mix of local residents, real estate developers, legal eagles, and community activists descended on Down Neck's Sport Club Português for a public meeting to debate the neighborhood's fate.
"This will be a transformative development for the city, something that the East Ward has never seen in its history," said East Ward Councilman Michael Silva, whose district encompasses the neighborhood. "It could change the entire scope of the Ironbound."
The scope of the proposed project, called Iberia Phase 1 after the beloved restaurant that sat on the property in question, was the focus at the Nov. 8 meeting, which was attended by more than 125 people.
Iberia Phase 1 involves a lot bounded by the Passaic River, as well as Ferry, Prospect, Congress, and Jefferson streets, blocks from the Newark Penn Station transit hub. Four high-rise towers - two 26 stories, two 30 stories - will hold 1,400 residential units, along with an embedded 23,000 square feet of retail space. Part of Congress Street will become a pedestrian-friendly passage, designed to ultimately connect to Riverfront Park. One hundred fifty public parking spaces will be created, as well as 440 residential parking spaces for building tenants.
The range of resident responses included concerns about the potential injection of thousands of new residents into the densely packed neighborhood. The looming strain on the already-taxed infrastructure of schools and sewers amid frequent floods and rampant double parking led locals to speak out.
"Those are lovely pictures. But the Ironbound is a neighborhood of narrow, one-way streets," said Carlos Raimundo, a financial planner. "You're putting 30-story towers and a few thousand people here. You have the gall and the audacity to say look how these towers sit appropriately in our neighborhood. It's a neighborhood of two- or three-story buildings. These towers are out of scale, and it will destroy this neighborhood."
"After the riots, the Ironbound was the gem of Newark. You want to know why? Because people stayed here, and they paid taxes. What are the tax breaks that the city is going to get? This isn't going to do anything for the city, except give us a headache."
"This area is already overcrowded," said Deborah Smith-Gregory, president of the Newark chapter of the NAACP. "To put thousands of people on top of the people who already live here is counterproductive. These pictures are very nice, but have no substance. The height is wrong. If you really want this, pull this down. If you want people to protest, then don't. This community deserves better."
Cheskel Schwimmer, CEO and founder of Chess Builders, developer of the project, countered, stating the project's ambition fits the location along the banks of the Passaic River.
"The current zoning allows this. On other riverfronts, there has been a need for a massive scale," said Schwimmer, whose company has developed large projects in Williamsburg and Long Island City. "We're not necessarily suggesting that type of grand scale. But for the future landscape, we want people to enjoy the views available in that location."
Jennifer Carrillo-Perez, an attorney for the law firm Connell Foley, which represents the developers, believes that Chess is attempting to work with the Ironbound community, not against it.
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https://www.tapinto.net/towns/newark...t-neighborhood
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