PUBLIC REVIEW OF FLUSHING WATERFRONT  
 DEVELOPMENT SET TO RESUME ON SEPT. 16 
 Rendering courtesy of FWRA LLC 
 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.COM   |   SEPT. 11-SEPT. 17, 2020 27  
 BY CARLOTTA MOHAMED 
 After a five-month hiatus due to  
 the COVID-19 pandemic, the City Planning  
 Commission  is  set  to  resume  the  
 Uniform Land Use Review Procedure  
 (ULURP) hearing on the controversial  
 Special Flushing Waterfront Development  
 proposal on Wednesday, Sept. 16.  
 The  Flushing  Waterfront  Development  
 would include nine buildings in  
 the area enclosed by 36th Avenue to the  
 north, College Point Boulevard to the  
 east, Roosevelt Avenue to the south, and  
 the Flushing Creek to the west. 
 The application was prepared by  
 FWRA LLC, a joint partnership of the  
 three major developers — F&T Group,  
 United Construction & Development  
 Group Inc. and Young Nian Group —  
 who own plots in the area.  
 The developers, who have deep-rooted  
 connections in Flushing and have been  
 active members of the community for  
 decades, say the project would involve $1  
 billion of private investment, and would  
 generate $28 million in annual revenue.  
 The proposal seeks to revitalize 29  
 acres of inactive and underutilized land  
 that the developers say will provide substantial  
 public benefits such as a privately  
 funded and maintained road network  
 and a 160,000-square-foot waterfront  
 promenade along Flushing Creek that  
 will both be publicly accessible.  
 The plan also includes 1,725 residential  
 units, including affordable housing,  
 879 hotels, office and community facilities, 
  retail space and parking spaces to  
 help alleviate traffic along College Point  
 Boulevard.  
 ‘No fences or gates’ 
 According to William Xu, vice president  
 of United Construction & Development  
 Group Inc., the waterfront will be  
 100 percent open to the public.  
 “We are building it and funding  
 it — there are no fences or gates,” Xu  
 said. “Flushing is an area that doesn’t  
 really have open parks and space that  
 the public can enjoy and we are involuntarily  
 increasing that for them. For  
 the people that are opposing this project, 
   I  really  encourage  them  to  take a  
 deep  dive  and  look  at  everything  that  
 we are doing.”   
 The project has been met with some  
 opposition and criticism from community  
 leaders, organizers and residents,  
 but Community Board 7 approved the  
 rezoning plan in February. Meanwhile,  
 acting Borough President Sharon Lee  
 rejected  the  plan  in March,  citing  the  
 scale and scope of the project that will  
 significantly change the landscape of  
 downtown Flushing.  
 The developers, however, say there  
 are extensive legal protocols in place  
 to obtain a land use approval and will  
 continue  to  follow each and every one  
 of them.   
 Additionally, the required Environmental  
 Assessment Statement was  
 completed and the study is available  
 via public record, according to the developers. 
  The development will provide  
 environmental relief to the Flushing  
 Creek by providing upgrades to the existing  
 sewer and storm water drainage  
 systems and a large-scale removal of  
 contaminated soils. 
 According to Xu, the Flushing Waterfront  
 project  will  create  thousands  
 of jobs and give the community the economic  
 lift it needs to recover, especially  
 amid the COVID-19 pandemic.  
 Xu  estimates  that  there will  be  between  
 500 to 558 construction workers  
 on-site per day, and 3,000 permanent  
 jobs post-construction including hotel  
 workers, maintenance workers for the  
 private roads, as well as commercial  
 and retail space.  
 As for affordable housing, only the  
 northern area of the special district  
 will have a small existing zoning without  
 increasing density. There will be  
 75-90 units under the city’s Mandatory  
 Inclusionary Housing (MIH) Program,  
 according to Richard Siu, chief investment  
 officer of FnT Group.  
 John Liang, president of Young Nian  
 Group, said the project will provide upgraded  
 housing for everyday people. 
 “This is not for the super rich. We  
 are not filling super luxury apartments  
 like Manhattan or parts of Brooklyn,”  
 Liang said. “This is a place for a starter  
 family with a kid or a young couple  
 starting  their  career  that  can  actually  
 afford an apartment in New York  
 City.” 
 According to Liang, he doesn’t understand  
 why people are against the project  
 due to the fact that there are many benefits  
 to the community and to the people  
 that live and work in Flushing.  
 Not affordable enough? 
 On the other hand, opponents of the  
 development,  such  as  the  MinKwon  
 Community Center in Flushing, say the  
 rezoning of the waterfront will exponentially  
 speed up the process of gentrification  
 and displacement.  
 “Their current plan  is  to have 61 affordable  
 housing units at 80 percent area  
 median income (AMI) which is about  
 $85K for a family of four, when the income  
 for Flushing residents is between $11k to  
 $40K — it’s not affordable to our community  
 at all,” said Seonae Byeon, organizer  
 at the MinKwon Community Center.  
 The MinKwon Center for Community  
 Action along with the Greater Flushing  
 Chamber of Commerce and Chhaya CDC,  
 have filed a lawsuit against the Department  
 of City Planning and the City Planning  
 Commission, arguing that an environmental  
 review must be conducted for  
 the development proposal.  
 According to Byeon, the developers instead  
 created an Environmental Assessment  
 Study (EAS), that does not include  
 the community’s input or the impact of  
 the project they say will be detrimental  
 to the environment.  
 William Spiask, director of Housing  
 Justice at the Chhaya Community Development  
 Corporation, said the project  
 is “concerning and deeply alarming”  
 and claims to be meeting the needs of the  
 developers rather than those of the community. 
   
 “They found ways to inflate the buildable  
 density of the project out of right in  
 that document, and they found a way to  
 hide some of the potential development  
 that they would be able to do if they get  
 the rezoning and special district designation,” 
  Spiask said.  
 Spiask said the construction of a hospital, 
  community center, green space or  
 even  a  school  should  be  prioritized  instead  
 of a “capital-driven, profit-driven”  
 development that “falls flat across the  
 board.” 
 Sarah Ahn, director of the Flushing  
 Workers Center, said they should look at  
 Flushing as a whole, citing the existing  
 luxury condominiums in the community  
 that ranks second in the city behind Williamsburg  
 in Brooklyn.   
 “We need our elected officials to actually  
 fight  on  behalf  of  their  constituents  
 to say that we don’t need any more  
 of these condos — it’s making all of our  
 rents  expensive,  it’s  bringing  so  much  
 speculation into Flushing and why our  
 small businesses are closing,” Ahn said.  
 As the ULURP hearing is near approaching, 
  the community leaders are  
 demanding that the city halt the virtual  
 meeting.  
 “According to the Comptroller’s report, 
  41 percent of Flushing residents  
 do not have internet access, and they’re  
 making a sudden move to have a public  
 hearing on a virtual platform that a lot of  
 people are not familiar with,” Byeon said.  
 “There is not enough time or training for  
 people  on how  to be  online  and participate.” 
   
 Residents can attend the City Planning  
 Commission hearing on Sept. 16  
 at 10 a.m. to testify or submit their comments  
 online regarding the Special  
 Flushing Waterfront District.  
 Reach reporter Carlotta Mohamed by  
 e-mail at cmohamed@schnepsmedia.com  
 or by phone at (718) 260–4526. 
 
				
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