
 
        
         
		BY BEN VERDE 
 Crown  Heights  civic  gurus  
 voted  to  oppose  a  rezoning  
 scheme that would make  
 way  for  a  nine-story  mixeduse  
 building  on  Grand  Avenue  
 on Nov. 14 
 Members  of  Community  
 Board  Eight  voted  27-to-1  to  
 withhold  support  of  the  proposal  
 until  they  get  a  binding  
 agreement  to  dedicate  
 a  portion  of  the  building’s  
 9,000-square-feet ground fl oor  
 for either light industrial use  
 or  a  community  room,  with  
 one community  member saying  
 the  developer  needs  to  
 pony up some concessions  to  
 merit  the  windfall  in  building  
 rights.  
 “What  you’re  doing  is  actually  
 making  an  exchange  
 that  gives  the  developer  signifi  
 cantly  more  than  what  
 the  community  is  getting,”  
 said  Prospect  Heights  resident  
 Peter Krashes. 
 The  developer,  Elie  Pariente, 
   is  seeking  a  rezoning  
 that  would  pave  the  way  for  
 construction  of  a  building  
 near  Pacifi c  Street,  which  
 would  house  64  residential  
 units — including 16 units of  
 affordable housing — and the  
 aforementioned  ground-fl oor  
 retail.  
  
 COURIER L 44     IFE, NOV. 22-28, 2019 
 The  community  board’s  
 land-use subcommittee voted  
 9-to-4 in favor in the rezoning  
 proposal on Nov. 7, before the  
 full board switched gears and  
 demanded the additional concession  
 in exchange for their  
 endorsement.  
 The board’s fi nal vote refl  
 ects the group’s ongoing  
 efforts to upzone parts of  
 Crown Heights in an effort to  
 promote the creation of industrial  
 manufacturing jobs. The  
 proposed neighborhood rezoning, 
  dubbed the M–Crown  
 rezoning,  would  allow  developers  
 to build higher, but require  
 them to set aside some  
 space for light industrial use.  
 The  development  scheme  
 as  proposed  by  Pariente  
 would  exceed  the  maximum  
 building envelope envisioned  
 by board members in their  
 larger rezoning proposal, and  
 one civic guru expressed concern  
 that  approving  this  application  
 without altering the  
 density would invite other developers  
 to do the same.  
 “You’re  setting  a  precedent  
 for  how  you’re  doing  
 this,” said Krashes. 
 But  another  land-use  buff  
 said  the added density was  a  
 worthy bargaining chip to extract  
 the added benefi ts from  
 the developer. 
 “It’s a bigger pie,” said Gib  
 Veconi. 
 And Pariente himself said  
 the  concession  was  no  skin  
 off his back, and agreed to set  
 aside space for the community’s  
 desired uses at his rezoning  
 application winds its way  
 through  the  city’s  lengthy  
 public-review process. 
 “At  this  point  whatever  
 mechanism  the  community  
 board  and  everyone  feels  is  
 necessary  to make  sure  that  
 this restriction gets enforced  
 is okay by me,” the developer  
 said. 
 The  site  as  it  currently  exists. 
   Google 
 The rezoning would make way for a nine-story, 64-unit building.    
   Illustration courtesy of Archamaera 
 Land use gurus oppose  
 Crown Heights rezoning