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Parking concerns for Zoning Board


Serious concerns about overflow street parking in the neighborhood prompted the Zoning Board of Adjustment to push back a vote on a senior affordable housing development proposed for the St. Mary’s Church property on Esterbrook Avenue.

Representatives for Domus Corporation, the development arm of Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Newark, testified for three hours Monday night and were asked to return to the Feb. 28 meeting with more parking options. They seek preliminary and final site plan approval, along with several variances for a four-story, 51-unit senior housing facility. The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is providing more than $11.2 million to build the project, in addition to subsidizing part of the rent for qualified residents.

The project would eliminate eight spaces from the current 86-space parking lot while adding 27 specifically designated for senior housing (for a total 105 spaces). Residents of the senior facility would have specifically designated spaces also be able to use the church lot for overflow parking, but the church could not use the seniors’ space.

“There is overflow onto the streets but not to the point of saturation,” traffic engineer Joe Staigar testified, adding that he doesn’t believe there would be additional overflow from this project, judging from similar senior housing projects in Garwood, Linden and Westfield. During a site visit on Sunday, Dec. 5, he said there were about 50 to 60 vacant spaces on surrounding blocks while during a visit on Friday, Dec. 10, about 30 to 35 vacant spaces were found in the area.

A typical development would require 1.8 spaces per 1-bedroom unit and 2.3 per 2-bedroom unit but given the demographics of a senior facility, 0.5 parking spaces should suffice, said Staigar. During his site visits to Clifford Case Apartments on West Milton Avenue, about 20 of the 28 spaces for 40 units were filled, while at the 196-unit Golden Age Towers on East Milton, generally 75 to 85 of the 104 spaces were filled.

Father Dennis Kaelin of Divine Mercy Parish (the combined St. Mary’s and St. Mark’s parishes) testified that the parking lot at St. Mary’s is generally about 80 percent occupied. Rahway Alternative High School operates out of the St. Mary’s school building and has about 25 spaces designated for staff during school days. A Thursday night prayer group accounts for some 20 spaces but the lot is full for Friday’s prayer group, he said.

Board members seemed unconvinced by testimony that suggested the demographics of a low-income senior housing facility would bring few car owners. Several members expressed serious concerns about exacerbating parking issues in the neighborhood, given the almost half a dozen churches within two blocks; Veterans Field, which hosts high school football games on Saturdays or Friday nights in the fall; the Union County Performing Arts Center less than two blocks away, and an amphitheater and black box theater planned around the corner on Hamilton Street. “They (residents) put up for years with people going to church, and not enough parking. The only concern is parking,” said board member Egon Behrmann, suggesting that if 10 of the units have a couple who each have a car, that leaves only seven spaces for the remaining 41 units.

Representatives for Domus said the parking complaints from other churches is an existing parking issue, but that the senior facility can accommodate its own parking. “Churches in the area are not going to change, what’s going to is the 51 units and losing eight spaces,” said Staigar. If the church needs more parking, he said it could use nearby St. Mark’s, if necessary.

Board member Josh Donovan suggested the applicant review the actual parking and if there’s a shortage, not make it up by street parking but perhaps lease spaces from the Parking Authority if it falls short. He also asked whether any attempt was made to acquire adjacent property for parking and the possibility of creating underground or first-floor parking. Underground or first-floor parking would be cost-prohibitive given HUD requirements and impractical for a senior facility the demographics, said architect Steven Cohen, adding that the building’s small footprint might only yield six spaces.

Lawrence Street resident Renee Thrash is a member of Ebenezer A.M.E. Church, located across the street from St. Mary’s. She told the board that said parking is a big issue in the neighborhood given the number of churches nearby while patrons of the arts center park along Central Avenue for blocks on the night of events.

Diane Bettinger of Campbell Street said sometimes she can’t go out of her house on Sundays, and waits until after church services. “We don’t go anywhere when there’s an event” at the arts center, she said, adding that they also got residential parking permits because commuters were using street parking.

Board Chairman William Hering implored the applicant to come back with a plan that has more parking to lessen the impact on the neighborhood. “It’s a tight fit,” he said, suggesting that they acquire more property or reduce the number of units, something the applicant’s attorney said is not economically feasible. “Come back with creative plans that make us all feel comfortable; I don’t think 51 into 27 will fit,” Hering said.

City Planner Paul Phillips suggested it would be helpful if the application provided documentation to bring board members to comfort level on parking variance, examining comparable projects at the same income levels and look at the parking offered there.

Dornoch ‘dead in the water’ on The Savoy

“We’re dead in the water right now.” That’s how Glen Fishman, managing partner of Dornoch Holdings, described to Redevelopment Agency commissioners his firm’s situation with The Savoy.

In a rare appearance at the agency’s meeting Wednesday night, Fishman was invited to provide an update on the firm’s stalled projects and activity at its properties. He started with the good news (filling rental properties), but we’ll get to that in our next post. For now, the bad news.

“We’re a little stuck here, I wish I had better news,” Fishman told commissioners, adding that they’re still negotiating with Wachovia. Rahway’s real estate fundamentals still exist, with its location and proximity but housing prices have made it hard to get people to invest. “People are still confident in Rahway, it’s just the economics,” he said. Condos can’t be built when they’re selling for $150,000 a unit, he said, but expressed confidence in “getting something there” in 12 months.

Dornoch spent a lot of money acquiring properties along Main Street for the four-story, 36-unit development, many of which were razed. Archaeological and historical issues relating to cisterns at the Savoy site cost Dornoch $1 million and a year’s time, he claimed, which “blew the budget on the Wachovia loan.” At one point there was a possibility of financing from Valley National for rental apartments but the deal could not get done, he said.

Fishman told commissioners he hopes “at some point the economics make sense, whether selling to another developer who can make it work” or otherwise. Dornoch has fielded offers from some local developers, he said, but so far three offers that have been made “have not been acceptable to the lender.”

(By my estimate, via PropertyShark and other sites, Dornoch acquired almost 20 downtown parcels at a total cost of almost $9 million or more — mine may be an incomplete list — pretty much the height of the real estate market in 2006.)

Redevelopment Agency Chairman William Rack asked if the steel beams, which went up at The Savoy site in summer 2008, might be taken down at some point, assuming they probably won’t be used in whatever ends up at the site. Fishman said it’s not necessarily a certainty that the steel would go unused. Steel doesn’t really go bad so it still has value, he said, adding that Dornoch doesn’t have the money to remove it anyway, and doing so might actually reduce the value of the property.

Blaze rips through apartments under construction

A four-alarm blaze that drew firefighters from many neighboring towns this morning tore through a three-story apartment building that was under construction since early last year.

At least three helicopters hovered overhead this morning, capturing video of the roof fire and some reports indicated reached as far as Manhattan’s West Side Highway. St. Georges Avenue was closed for most of the day from West Hazelwood Avenue and/or West Milton Avenue to West Grand Avenue, with traffic jamming side streets during the morning rush.

This story from Patch.com quotes the fire chief as calling the building “finished” after Tuesday’s fire. Mayor Rick Proctor, who was sworn in Monday night, told MyCentralJersey.com: “I’ve got to figure it’s a total loss.”

We posted an update about the project in October and in August, when Jim Sisto, president of Fanwood-based Sisto Realty, said he expected it would be mostly done by October and completed by the new year. In recent weeks, the building took on a new look, with the dark-colored mansard-type roof. Many of the initial reports called the building a condo complex but it was actually planned as rental apartments. Of the 5o units, 37 were planned as two-bedrooms, with 13 one-bedrooms.

The 5-acre site was a wooded area for years before trees were cleared in summer 2009 to make way for construction. Plans to build there go back even farther though, when the Zoning Board rejected a 60-unit application for the site in March 2003 (.pdf). The builder appealed before 50 units were approved in 2004. The Zoning Board granted extensions each year through September 2009 as the developer awaited approvals from the state departments of environmental protection and transportation (St. Georges/Route 27 being a state highway).

For more photos or video of the blaze, keep an eye on Facebook or our Twitter updates (top of the page on the right).

Amphitheater bids to be awarded next week

Construction bids for the amphitheater and black box theater were opened Dec. 15 and likely will be awarded by the Redevelopment Agency at its Jan. 5 meeting.

The City Council recently awarded a contract of $5,750 to Whitestone Associates to conduct survey and prepare report of “asbestos containing materials” at 324-326 Hamilton St., one of several homes that are planned to be acquired and razed for the project. The Redevelopment Agency last summer authorized acquisition of the 2 1/2-story home for $240,000, and the City Council OKed another $160,000 for asbestos surveys and other engineering-related work.

Construction bids had to be re-bid after a judge ruled there was some ambiguity in the original bids this past fall. The Redevelopment Agency originally awarded a nearly $5-million bid in October. The City Council last spring approved borrowing a $8.5 million for the Hamilton Street arts projects.

New poll: Best Chinese

It’s been awhile since we had a poll and since Christmas is almost here, this one seemed timely and appropriate:

What’s your favorite Chinese restaurant/eatery?
Dragon Palace
Hunan Kitchen
Ming Feng
New Fon Garden
New Great Wall
Panda China
No. 1 Chinese Kitchen

For the sake of the poll, Chinese is meant to encompass all Asian cuisine (Japanese, Korean, etc.). Hope that’s OK with everybody. Let me know if there’s any place that I’ve missed that you think should be included the poll.

Maybe next month we’ll come back with the pizza poll which has been popular. And I’m always open to suggestions for future polls.

The Rail House 1449 opens Friday

The Rail House 1449 will begin operating on Friday.

Dozens of people packed the former David Drake location for an open house last night where owner Larry Fishman told me his plan is to begin with dinner service, starting Friday, and perhaps boost marketing efforts after the new year. Fishman was a former owner of The Stone Pony in Asbury Park until several years ago.

Restaurantpassion.com describes the menu as “contemporary American cuisine” with the range for an average dinner entree between $15 and $22, and recommends reservations.

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Here’s a pretty cool story from The Star-Ledger/nj.com a few weeks back about an investment foundation helping start-up businesses along Newark’s Halsey Street with interest-free loans.

Does this building look familiar?

The former Beverage Shop building on East Cherry Street has undergone a transformation of its exterior as plans continue to turn it into a police assistance center.

Police Chief John Rodger hopes to have new signage and awning completed before the holidays while a local electrician’s union will be donating resources.

The heating, ventilation and air conditioning is just about completed and there’s some asbestos abatement to be done, said Rodger, who has been pleased with the pace of progress over the last month to six weeks.

The facade would have been $15,000 if they had to pay for it, said Rodger, and still to be done are things like acquiring classroom and cubicle furniture and installing flooring and a phone system.

Rodger hopes to have the building at least partially in use by January or February and be completely finished by March.

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Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital at Rahway was downgraded by Moody’s Investors Services, according to a report in Crain’s New York last month, and expects to end 2010 with “sizable operating losses,” like it did in 2009. The rating agency downgraded the hospital’s long-term debt rating and lowered its outlook from “stable” to “negative,” citing declining admissions.

Happy anniversary Rahway Rising

Nov. 1 really snuck up on me this year. I don’t think I expected to still be doing this when I started three years ago, but here we are with Post #373.

I started out looking to post once a week — at least according to the very first blog post. I’ve gotten into the habit of aiming for two to three times a week if there’s something to tell, but it really ebbs and flows: some weeks I can’t find the time to get to the computer, other weeks I’ve got blog posts piling up (at least in my head).

I usually aim to provide some readership data in my anniversary posts but I haven’t had much time to compile anything about the most popular individual posts over the last year. Perhaps you’d like to share some your observations of the changes you’ve seen around town since we started?

We do get about 1,000 visits in a good week, and more than 200 visits during an average weekday. Since we started tracking data on Google Analytics in January 2008, in all, we’ve had 36,000+ visitors, 125,000+ visits and 205,000 page views. Some other current stats:

– 289 e-mail subscribers
– 190 friends on Facebook
– 183 fans on Facebook
– 95 followers on Twitter

All that has translated to maybe a penny a week through Google Ads since we gave that a shot starting in summer 2008. That’s not why I do it (thank goodness!). We’re always open to trying new stuff, even doing the Facebook and Twitter thing, as well as two happy hour events in the past year (and yes, we should do that again soon…). The mission of the blog remains the same: to provide information about what’s going on with redevelopment efforts throughout town, given the dearth of coverage.

I think the most fun for me are the random emails from readers, either inquiring about a certain project or something they saw, offering suggestions, or just a pleasant note to tell me how much they enjoy the blog. Whether you take an active or passive role in this little effort of mine, thanks for reading.

2nd anniversary blog post
1st anniversary blog post