Thursday, June 14, 2012

NYC Grand Central Area for possible Rezoning

New York City Planning positions East Midtown for upzoning. 
 
The new zoning pays particluar attenition to the Grand Central area.
Tom Stoelker / AN
 
The last major rezoning push by the Bloomberg Administration in Manhattan could be upzoning the grand dames around Park, Madison and Grand Central. On June 6, the Department of City Planning (DCP) went to Community Boards 5 and 6 to open the discussion on East Midtown, a-yet-to-be-defined business district surrounding Grand Central. While Midtown is hardly a tabula rasa along the lines of Hudson Yards or the World Trade Center, rezoning has the potential, according to Edith Hsu-Chen, director of DCP’s Manhattan office, to “seed” a healthy amount of new development for the next ten, 20, or 30 years, while boosting the value of one of the world’s premier office addresses.
At least one developer has already taken notice. Earlier this month The Wall Street Journal reported that SL Green, one of the city’s largest commercial property owners with more than 25 million square feet of office space throughout Manhattan, has assembled a one-block parcel right next door to Grand Central between Madison and Vanderbilt on 42nd Street to be developed in a joint venture with architect-savvy developer Hines. The company has already rehabbed several old buildings in East Midtown, including 62-year-old 100 Park Avenue, which sports 14 green rooftops and LEED Silver certification. “If we don’t do something now,” Mary Anne Tighe, the powerful broker and CBRE chief officer has said, “in the fullness of time we might find these areas have become orphans.”

 
SL Green's recently assembled parcel at 42nd and Vanderbilt (left) and the firm's 100 Park renovated by architects MOed de armas and shannon (right).
 
Edward Piccinich, SL Green's executive vice president of property management and construction, appears to be in it for the long haul, but not without concern about the next Planning Commission. “Whoever goes in [to Midtown] is going to have to work in a very strategic way, whether it’s coordinating with the MTA, mixed-use development, or circulation,” he said. “It’s not just about creating a plaza.”
Developing East Midtown will not be for the harried or the faint of heart. The applicable zoning codes in the area are a paralyzing mess of contradictory allowances. The 1961 zoning law implemented floor area ratios, or FARs, in many cases tighter than what was already built. In 1982 a Special Midtown District was created to restrict FAR in an attempt to shift development west to help Times Square. The plan worked all too well and development in eastern Midtown slowed. Then in 1992 the Grand Central Subdistrict—from 41st to 48th streets and between Madison and Lexington avenues—was created to allow for air right transfers from Grand Central Terminal and other area landmarks to new developments nearby.


SL Green's reclad 100 Park reflects 99 Park, a building designed by Emery Roth & Sons, 1953.
 
The average permitted FAR in Midtown East is 12 to 15, but in the Grand Central Subdistrict it can be as much as 21.6 FAR. The problem for developers is if they want to tear down an obsolete pre-1961 tower of, say, 21FAR, they can only build it back up to a post-1961 zoning allowance of about 15FAR.
And yet, in spite of the failed 1992 incentives, the still-in-place 1982 disincentives, and the added turn-offs of subway improvement requirements, mandated plazas, and a very public review process, the area still commands top dollar, although the study (don’t call it a plan yet) presented at Community Board 5 noted that there’s been just 0.06 percent annual growth rate in the past decade.
The new zoning will likely allow a 21.6 FAR with out any of the current constraints. It will also likely allow a massing cluster near Grand Central—where the taller buildings already exist, but are considered by many developers to be outdated and beyond renovation. Piccinich notes that many of today’s office tenants are looking for column-free continuous office floor plates, which are rare in buildings built before 1960.
The planning department's study also pays extensive attention to pedestrian circulation and mass transit below grade. Any changes there would require intense coordination with the MTA. By 2019 Long Island Rail Road’s East Side Access project will be funneling a horde of LIRR commuters through the same MTA tunnels that Metro North passengers use. Hsu-Chen said an already existing bottleneck at the subway turnstiles has got to be part of the conversation, too.


The Bleak VANDERBILT avenue during morning Rush: June 14, 8:45AM.
 
With world-class congestion below grade, it’s almost perverse to note the desolate quality of Vanderbilt Avenue. This dank but grand old side street was left adrift when 9/11 put a stop to the taxi drop-offs at the Vanderbilt Entrance to Grand Central. The site has obvious potential for a DOT plaza.
Upzoning has its champions, but the concerns are many. Preservationists were already gunning at the proposal months ago. But even Simeon Bankoff, executive director of the Historic District Council, acknowledged the area needs help. “They’ve always had tall buildings around [Grand Central],” he said, adding that the real problems have to do with infrastructure and pedestrian circulation. “I hope they don’t do too many slabbed plazas,” he added.
The main objection voiced at CB5 and by opponents is that there are millions of square feet of brand new office space to be leased at the World Trade Center and at Hudson Yards. Planning’s Hsu-Chen stated the obvious: Planning’s job is to plan. The implication was that Bloomberg’s time is running out and the Commission cannot wait until Hudson Yards and World Trade Center are leased before taking action on Midtown.

Written by Tom Stoelker

You can view the original contents of this article HERE







Engineering Designs for Fire Alarms - Sprinklers - Mechanical - Plumbing - Electrical - Structural Concrete cast in place & Testing - Demolition - Excavation - Sheeting Shoring and Bracing - Underpinning + More

Architectural Designs for Renovation (Residential & Commercial) - Zoning Calculations - Interior Designs - Change of use - Egress - Occupancy - Enlargement - Extensions - Final Certificate  of Occupancy Conversion of  1-2-3-Multiple Family + More

Violations Removal for Department of Buildings (DOB) - HPD - Department of Transportation (DOT) - Fire Department (FDNY) - Department of Sanitation (DOS) - Department of Health & Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) - Environmental Control Board (ECB) + More

Expediting for all city agencies - DOB - FDNY - DOT - ECB - Department of Finance (DOF) - Landmarks + More

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Willets Point (Queens NY) the new highlight of Corona - Flushing

The retain and entertainment complex to abut the west side of Citi Field.
The retain and entertainment complex to abut the west side of Citi Field.

Mayor Bloomberg evoked Fitzgerald today when he announced the deal between Sterling Equities and Related Companies to revamp Willets Point. “Today the ‘valley of ashes’ is well on its way to becoming the site of historic private investment,” the mayor said in a statement, referring to the gritty midpoint between Gatsby’s West Egg manse and Manhattan. The plan pegs its success to a  mega entertainment/retail hub just west of the stadium, that sounds very much a part of a trend in projects that used to be called malls, but are now called retail/entertainment attractions (see also the aptly named American Dream in NJ).


The 126th Street corridor north of Citifield will be home to the hotel and more retail.
The 126th Street corridor east of Citifield will be home to the hotel and more retail.

Willets West, as the new complex will be called, promises to convert a former parking lot into more than one million square feet of retail, movie theaters, restaurants, venues, and, of course, parking. But before that the city will spend $100 million east side of the site in demolition and cleanup of the former auto repair shops and junk yards, and then install much needed basic infrastructure. The city is already installing $50 million worth of sewers. Also east of the stadium, the Sterling/Related partnership, called the Queens Development Corporation, will begin developing the 126th Street corridor, where a 200 room hotel will abut 30,000 square feet of retail and a twenty acre interim parking lot.

Another view of the 126th Street corrider.
Another view of the 126th Street corrider.

After all that is done, then comes the housing. The Willets Point Community, as it is to be called, will have 4.5 million square feet of mixed-use development. This phase of the project will include construction of the Van Wyck Expressway’s access ramps that city got approval for in April. Another 900,000 square feet of street level retail will meet 500,000 square feet of office space, another hotel, and 2,500 units of housing, of which 35 percent will be affordable.
That the housing comes so late in the game has got more than few politians up up in arms. The Daily News reported early this week that City Coucilmember Karen Koslowitz was not pleased. It’s a pretty sensitive topic that was initially raises in The Wall Street Journal last month, which cited Willets Point and Atlantic Yards as examples of where housing was used to win favor with the locals but ends up being the last component of the project scheduled for completion.




Willets Point Plan released by the Mayor's Office. 


You can View the original contents on this article HERE



Engineering Designs for Fire Alarms - Sprinklers - Mechanical - Plumbing - Electrical - Structural Concrete cast in place & Testing - Demolition - Excavation - Sheeting Shoring and Bracing - Underpinning + More

Architectural Designs for Renovation (Residential & Commercial) - Zoning Calculations - Interior Designs - Change of use - Egress - Occupancy - Enlargement - Extensions - Final Certificate  of Occupancy Conversion of  1-2-3-Multiple Family + More

Violations Removal for Department of Buildings (DOB) - HPD - Department of Transportation (DOT) - Fire Department (FDNY) - Department of Sanitation (DOS) - Department of Health & Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) - Environmental Control Board (ECB) + More

Expediting for all city agencies - DOB - FDNY - DOT - ECB - Department of Finance (DOF) - Landmarks + More

We offer all housing & building services: PLUMBERS - LICENSED CONTRACTORS - DEVELOPERS - PERMITS + MORE.

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New York City. Leading the way in job creation in all of the United States

Through NYCEDC’s various projects, programs and initiatives, we’re helping create jobs throughout the five boroughs. From development and construction to affordable incubator spaces that nurture startups, from various types of funding to training programs, competitions, and neighborhood improvements, find out what we’re doing to help nurture businesses that create new jobs and fuel our economy.

Job Creation by Industry

Fashion

  • New York City’s fashion industry employs 173,000 people, accounting for 5.7% of the City’s workforce and generating nearly $10 billion in total wages with tax revenues of $1.7 billion (source: US Department of Labor).
  • Given that proximity to factories is critical for designers, NYC remains a robust fashion manufacturing center. Fashion manufacturing represents 31% of all manufacturing jobs in NYC (source: Fashion.NYC.2020 Report).
  • Design Entrepreneurs NYC: Free, intensive "mini-MBA" program that equips select fashion designers with the skills they need to successfully run a fashion label.
  • Fashion Campus NYC: Free education and networking program to help interested university-level interns jump-start their careers on the business side of NYC's fashion industry.
  • Fashion Draft NYC: Talent recruitment program that aims to connect business-minded college seniors with management-track positions at some of NYC's top fashion firms.
  • CFDA Fashion Incubator: Operated by CFDA, the incubator offers low-cost studio space for up to 12 emerging fashion designers. 
  • Learn more about Fashion.NYC.2020 to see how NYCEDC is ensuring New York City's position as the global leader in fashion.

Construction

Medical

  • The New York metropolitan area has the largest scientific and healthcare workforce in the country, which accounts for 427,300 jobs. (source: US Department of Labor)
  • Small Business Innovative Research: NYCEDC offers training workshops to help bioscience companies in New York City acquire funding and grants from the National Institute of Health (NIH) and Department of Defense (DoD).
  • Learn more about the emerging NYC bioscience cluster
  • Download the Bioscience Incentives Guide to see how NYC is continuing to attract and build great life sciences companies.

Tech

  • The tech hub in NYC is growing rapidly. In the last five years, information technology jobs in the City have increased by 28.7 percent. (source: Center for an Urban Future, New Tech City)
  • General Assembly, Hive at 55, DUMBO Incubator: Workspaces for technology startups, media freelancers, and the Brooklyn digital/tech community. 
  • NYC BigApps Competition: Annual competition for individuals or companies to develop online mobile applications that utilize official City datasets. 
  • NYC Media Lab: Partnership to encourage collaboration between academic institutions undertaking research and companies looking to advance new media technologies.
  • Applied Sciences: Groundbreaking citywide initiative to build engineering campuses to dramatically increase NYC's capacity in the applied sciences to maintain our global competitiveness.
  • Learn more about Media.NYC.2020: The City's suite of initiatives aimed at strengthening and growing the media and technology sectors in New York City. 
  • Read the Media.NYC.2020 Report to see how NYCEDC is ensuring New York City's position as the global leader in media and tech.

Higher Education

  • The higher education industry employs over 120,000 people and makes up 4.1% of the City's workforce. (source: Industry Snapshot Profiles)
  • Build NYC: Facilitates access to tax-exempt bond financing for not-for-profit organizations, including educational institutions.
  • Applied Sciences: Cornell/Technion will build a world-class applied sciences and engineering campus on Roosevelt Island, and NYU will lead a consortium to create the Center for Urban Science and Progress in Downtown Brooklyn. 
  • Read the Edutech.NYC.2020 Report to see how NYCEDC is implementing initiatives to support this emerging industry sector that applies innovative technology to deliver learner-centric, personalized educational methods.
See what we're doing to create jobs in additional industries as well.

You can view the original content of this article HERE



Engineering Designs for Fire Alarms - Sprinklers - Mechanical - Plumbing - Electrical - Structural Concrete cast in place & Testing - Demolition - Excavation - Sheeting Shoring and Bracing - Underpinning + More

Architectural Designs for Renovation (Residential & Commercial) - Zoning Calculations - Interior Designs - Change of use - Egress - Occupancy - Enlargement - Extensions - Final Certificate  of Occupancy Conversion of  1-2-3-Multiple Family + More

Violations Removal for Department of Buildings (DOB) - HPD - Department of Transportation (DOT) - Fire Department (FDNY) - Department of Sanitation (DOS) - Department of Health & Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) - Environmental Control Board (ECB) + More

Expediting for all city agencies - DOB - FDNY - DOT - ECB - Department of Finance (DOF) - Landmarks + More

We offer all housing & building services: PLUMBERS - LICENSED CONTRACTORS - DEVELOPERS - PERMITS + MORE.

CALL US (347)- 968- 3777 FOR CONSULTATION

Email us NycBuildingSolutions@Gmail.com 24/7

http://NYC-BuildingSolutions.com/

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Mayor Bloomberg Announces Deal to Transform Willets Point (Queens NY)

Mayor Bloomberg Announces Historic Deal to Transform Willets Point Into A Vibrant Destination and Mixed-Use Community

Proposal by the Queens Development Group, a Joint Venture of Sterling Equities and Related Companies, Will Unlock Over Five Million Square Feet of New Development and Create 7,100 Permanent Jobs and 12,000 Construction Jobs

Plan Includes Remediation of 23 Acres of a Long-Contaminated Site, Activation of 126th Street, and Creation of a New Dynamic Retail and Entertainment Destination

Mayor Also Announces City Has Acquired 95 Percent of Land Required for Project to Move Forward

Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Queens Development Group, a joint venture between Sterling Equities, Inc. and Related Companies today announced the development plans for transforming long-blighted Willets Point into a dynamic mixed-use neighborhood and destination. The historic realization of this community-driven vision, approved by the New York City Council in 2008, is the culmination of more than 50 years of development efforts and has been more than a decade in the making.

The Queens Development Group agreement will result in construction as originally envisioned in the Special Willets Point Zoning District and Urban Renewal Plan, but there will be additional environmental remediation on even more acreage than was originally envisioned, and the plan will activate significant acreage on both sides of Citi Field to create a true center of economic growth for Queens. The Mayor outlined the plans at a breakfast hosted by the Queens Chamber of Commerce, where he was joined by Sterling Equities Executive Vice President Jeffrey Wilpon, Related Companies President Jeff Blau, Deputy Mayor for Economic Development Robert K. Steel, New York City Economic Development Corporation President Seth Pinsky, Queens Borough President Helen Marshall, and Congressman Joseph Crowley.

“At Willets Point, where others have seen challenges, we have always seen enormous opportunities,” said Mayor Bloomberg. “Today the ‘valley of ashes’ is well on its way to becoming the site of historic private investment, major job creation and unprecedented environmental remediation. Investing in infrastructure and laying the groundwork for private investment are hallmarks of our Administration’s economic development strategy, and projects like this one are part of the reason our economy is doing better than the rest of the country.”

“From the earliest days of his Administration, Mayor Bloomberg has been focused on bringing jobs and investment to all five boroughs, and with today’s historic announcement that's exactly what he's doing again in Queens,” Deputy Mayor Steel said. “This project will transform a long-neglected neighborhood that will now link Flushing and Corona and – importantly – clean up toxic sites that damage New York’s waterfront.”

“We are thrilled to have been selected by the City to advance the Mayor and the administration’s vision to rejuvenate Willets Point and completely transform a 23 acre dilapidated area into a stunning new mixed use neighborhood, which will become a destination and serve as a catalyst for future development and investment. We commend Mayor Bloomberg for his steadfast commitment to redevelop Willets Point which will benefit the borough’s economy with 12,000 union construction jobs and 7,100 permanent jobs in the initial phase alone. We look forward to working with the administration, EDC, local elected officials and the community as the development moves forward,” said Jeff Wilpon, EVP of Sterling Equities, Inc., and Jeff Blau, President of Related Companies, the joint venture partner entities of Queens Development Group.

“Today’s announcement marks the beginning of a clear and achievable plan for the new Willets Point,” said New York City Economic Development President Seth W. Pinsky. “As a result of this historic project, an area that for decades was in desperate need of new infrastructure and remediation will be transformed into a dynamic community for future generations, creating thousands of jobs and increased economic activity that will benefit Queens and the entire city for years to come.”

The Queens Development Group will acquire an initial 23 acres in the Special Willets Point District to the east of Citi Field to begin build-out of Phase 1 and will create a retail and entertainment attraction to the west of Citi Field, allowing for a more comprehensive and continuous transit-oriented development around access to the Mets/Willets Point stops on the 7 Train and Long Island Rail Road. Ultimately, the plan will unlock over 5 million square feet of new development in a unified district, transforming a contaminated area into a new neighborhood. The build-out will include retail, hotel and commercial uses to complement a residential community of 2,500 housing units, of which 875 units will be affordable. The expanded vision will infuse $3 billion of private investment into the local economy and create 7,100 permanent jobs and 12,000 direct construction jobs with MWBE and local hiring goals of 25 percent.  During construction, the project will generate over $310 million in new tax revenue, and once operational will account for over $150 million in new annual tax revenue.   

In the coming months, the City and the Queens Development Group will begin the process of updating the existing environmental impact statement and amending the zoning text needed to advance the plan, allowing for the subsequent remediation of 23 acres of contaminated land in Willets Point, which is critical to future development on the site. The City will provide almost $100 million in capital funds towards demolition, remediation, infrastructure and permanent improvements to the land to expedite the project. 

Upon completion of the offsite infrastructure and remediation projects, the Queens Development Group will continue the transformation of the area by activating the 126th Street corridor with a 200-room hotel and 30,000 square feet of retail and restaurants. This step also includes an interim 20-acre surface parking area that would be converted to recreational space 183 days per year during both the MLB off-season period and during certain in-season road trips by the Mets. Anticipated recreational uses would include modular athletic fields and community open space designed by the architects of Citi Field. This public recreation zone, with uses to be developed through community input, could include amenities such as soccer fields, basketball courts, ice skating, and a multi-sport bubble.

Willets West, the new component of the project, will be to the immediate west of Citi Field and will convert a stadium parking lot into a one million-square-foot-retail and entertainment center, complete with over 200 retail stores of all sizes, movie theaters, restaurants, entertainment venues, a parking structure and surface parking for 2,500 cars and grand public spaces with year-round programming. This development, combined with the initial activation of 126th Street, will entail $1 billion of private investment, create 4,200 unionized construction jobs and 2,700 permanent jobs, and bring in $84 million in tax revenue during construction and $62 million in annual tax revenue upon completion.

Following this, the culmination of Phase 1 of Willets Point will result in the first 4.5 million square feet of mixed-use development for the new Willets Point Community. This will include the construction of the new Van Wyck Expressway Access Ramps, for which the City received approval from the Federal Highway Administration and the New York State Department of Transportation in March of this year. The ramps, which the City has committed capital out-year funding for, will be critical to enabling better access to the area.  Once complete, this first portion of the new Willets Point neighborhood will include 2,500 housing units, 35% of which will be affordable, 900,000 square feet of street-level retail serving the community, and 500,000 square feet of office space serving Queens businesses.  It will also feature an additional 280 hotel rooms (for a total of 480) and more than five acres of public space.

Work is progressing on schedule for the critical offsite infrastructure including construction of a sanitary sewer main and reconstruction of a storm sewer and outfall that the City broke ground on in December 2011. These $50 million in improvements support the historic redevelopment of Willets Point, which currently lacks this basic infrastructure, and provides over 350 construction or construction-related jobs.  Both sewers will be completed in 2013 with the construction primarily occurring between the months of October through March to prevent any impacts during the baseball season at Citi Field.

“As a long-term advocate for the improvement of Willets Point, I am pleased that this plan will advance its transformation,” said Queens Borough President Helen Marshall. “The plan will also create almost 10,000 much-needed construction jobs and more than 7,000 permanent jobs.”
“I am so pleased Mayor Bloomberg is our partner in Queens’ renaissance,” said Congressman Crowley. “From the redevelopment of Willets Point, to the expansion and modernization of the US Tennis Center at Flushing Meadows, to the creation of a new high-tech campus at Roosevelt Island, these ambitious plans will create jobs, boost our economy, and improve the lives of the 2.2 million residents of Queens County.”

“As a long time advocate of economic growth and job creation for Queens, I am excited about this $3 billion investment by Related Companies and Sterling Equities,” said State Senator Jose Peralta. “The 12,000 union construction job created will be an important boost to the residents of Queens County.”
“The long awaited development should be a major boon for the surrounding Queens communities,” said Assemblymember Michael Simanowitz. “This important revitalization has the potential to create thousands of union construction jobs and permanent jobs. I look forward to working with the City and the community to ensure that this vital project produces great results for our community.”
“Willets Point has the potential to be a great project and I look forward to the public review process and engaging with the administration and all of the relevant stakeholders to ensure that the project meets the needs of my community,” said Council Member Julissa Ferreras.

“Today’s announcement unveils an exciting new chapter in Mayor Bloomberg's five-borough economic development plan,” Steven Spinola, President of the Real Estate Board of New York said. “The plans put forward by Related and Sterling Equities will result in much needed jobs, housing and retail and entertainment opportunities. As a result of today's announcement, Willets Point will be a great, new exciting destination in New York City - a thought that has been unimaginable for far too long.”

“Today’s announcement of the initial phase of development at Willets Point will not only create 12,000 union construction jobs for hard-working men and women across the five-boroughs, but it will transform an underutilized contaminated area into an economic engine for the borough of Queens,” said Gary LaBarbera, president of the Building and Construction Trades Council. “I want to commend Mayor Bloomberg and his administration for their vision and their commitment to job creation.”

“The Willets Point plan is a historic redevelopment effort that will transform an area previous generations have sought to change and improve,” said Peter Ward, President New York Hotel & Motel Trades Council. “Not only will it clean up the environment and improve the quality of nearby waterways, this project will create thousands of good jobs. We applaud Mayor Bloomberg, Related and Sterling Equities for committing to make sure that any hospitality project at Willets will pay good wages and provide real benefits like healthcare and retirement security.”

“The plan to redevelop Willets Point shows the tremendous potential for our city when public and private sectors work in collaboration with unions on development projects,” said Mike Fishman, President of 32BJ SEIU. “This project promises to create thousands of the kinds of good-paying jobs that working people need to support their families and which New York needs to ensure a broadly shared prosperity.”

“The plan to transform Willets Point from Queens’ biggest eyesore to one of the centers of economic growth in our city is exactly the kind of sustainable development New York City needs,” said Kathryn Wylde, President & CEO of the Partnership for New York City. “This project will lead the way in revitalizing and expanding Queens’ economy and will create thousands of jobs at a time when they are most needed.”

The Mayor additionally announced that the City has made considerable progress in acquiring property through negotiated acquisitions with area business owners and now has control of or agreements to acquire approximately 95 percent of the land needed to proceed with this project. The City will provide relocation assistance to businesses, with relocation of businesses in the Phase 1 area occurring prior to the start of construction.

Additionally, professional development and skills training is available to the area’s employees through the Worker Assistance Program, administered by LaGuardia Community College, which has enrolled over 550 participants enrolled since its inception.

Additional phases of the full 62-acre Willets Point Redevelopment Plan remain unchanged, with the overall development of Willets Point allowing for up to 5,500 units of housing, a convention center and a central 8-acre park.






Engineering Designs for Fire Alarms - Sprinklers - Mechanical - Plumbing - Electrical - Structural Concrete cast in place & Testing - Demolition - Excavation - Sheeting Shoring and Bracing - Underpinning + More

Architectural Designs for Renovation (Residential & Commercial) - Zoning Calculations - Interior Designs - Change of use - Egress - Occupancy - Enlargement - Extensions - Final Certificate  of Occupancy Conversion of  1-2-3-Multiple Family + More

Violations Removal for Department of Buildings (DOB) - HPD - Department of Transportation (DOT) - Fire Department (FDNY) - Department of Sanitation (DOS) - Department of Health & Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) - Environmental Control Board (ECB) + More

Expediting for all city agencies - DOB - FDNY - DOT - ECB - Department of Finance (DOF) - Landmarks + More

We offer all housing & building services: PLUMBERS - LICENSED CONTRACTORS - DEVELOPERS - PERMITS + MORE.

CALL US (347)- 968- 3777 FOR CONSULTATION

Email us NycBuildingSolutions@Gmail.com 24/7

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