Builders that had been slated to construct inexpensive housing on a city-owned Manhattan lot lengthy residence to Elizabeth Avenue Backyard sued the town Wednesday to problem the town’s current sudden designation of the property as parkland.
The event, often known as Haven Inexperienced, would comprise 123 inexpensive residences for seniors with public inexperienced area on the location in Nolita. The challenge had been within the works in partnership with the town’s housing company for a couple of decade, led by builders Pennrose, Habitat for Humanity and RiseBoro Group Partnership.
The town had lengthy pushed to construct housing on the location, efficiently warding off lawsuits that sought to keep up the backyard as-is.
However in an about-face simply weeks earlier than the mayor’s time period ends, the Adams administration moved to cancel the housing challenge earlier this month, reclassifying Elizabeth Avenue Backyard as parkland with the intention to preclude constructing housing there.
The brand new designation took the builders unexpectedly, they usually argued within the lawsuit, filed in Manhattan State Supreme Courtroom, that the transfer was “a lawless act.”
The lawsuit warns that if the town’s actions had been allowed to face, they’d create a “harmful precedent” of Metropolis Corridor appearing to overturn a challenge that had been authorized by a proper public course of.
“This proclamation, issued with out authority, with out course of, with out public enter, and with none supporting administrative document, was designed to perform by fiat what a small cohort of ESG supporters had repeatedly failed to attain by regulation: the destruction of a duly authorized and urgently wanted inexpensive housing growth,” the lawsuit alleges.

The builders say of their court docket submitting that they goal to “restore the integrity of the land-use course of, to vindicate the rule of regulation, and to stop an outgoing administration from destroying an urgently wanted affordable-housing challenge by an act of bare govt energy,” the lawsuit said.
In an announcement, Deputy Mayor Randy Mastro — who’s a defendant within the case — known as the lawsuit “meritless.”
“We’re dedicated to making sure Elizabeth Avenue Backyard stays a beloved neighborhood park,” Mastro mentioned. “Designating this area as parkland will make the park absolutely accessible to the general public whereas additionally permitting us to allocate Parks Division assets to the backyard. It’s unlucky that these builders have now introduced a frivolous lawsuit to attempt to leverage a greater deal in negotiations with the town.”
The saga of Elizabeth Avenue Backyard goes again for a few years.
Allan Reiver, an vintage seller who ran a gallery subsequent to the Nolita lot, leased the then-vacant web site from the town within the early Nineteen Nineties. He saved some sculptures there and ultimately remodeled it right into a park-like pocket. Upon studying of plans to develop housing on the location, he allowed folks to entry the backyard from the gallery.
Over time, the backyard, ultimately run by a nonprofit helmed by Reiver’s son, held occasions and supplied public hours, rising to grow to be a beloved oasis for a lot of locals.
Efforts to “save” Elizabeth Avenue Backyard from changing into the location of housing drew in deep-pocketed and well-known supporters, together with Martin Scorsese, Robert DeNiro and Patti Smith.
The town had first supported Haven Inexperienced and even went to court docket to defend the challenge when backyard supporters sued to attempt to cease the event. They had been unsuccessful.
However in June, the Adams administration reversed its stance.
Mastro — who joined the administration in March following the departures of high-level staffers who supported Haven Inexperienced — reduce a take care of Councilmember Chris Marte (D-Manhattan) to forgo housing on the backyard and as a substitute rezone three different websites within the district to construct over 600 new residences. (The promised consequence is not so easy to attain and would take quite a few years to return to fruition.)
Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani mentioned he supported shifting ahead with the long-planned inexpensive housing challenge at Elizabeth Avenue Backyard, and would evict the backyard within the first 12 months of his mayorship.
The Adams administration’s transfer to reclassify the property as parkland gave the impression to be an try and thwart Mamdani, since constructing on parkland would require particular approval from the state legislature.

