You are reading

Developers of Massive Innovation QNS Project to Hold Town Hall Meeting This Month

The latest plan, as presented by the developers during Community Board 1’s Land Use and Zoning Committee meeting on Feb. 16 (Screenshot)

April 5, 2022 By Christian Murray

The developers behind the massive Innovation QNS project in Astoria that involves the rezoning of five city blocks will be holding a town hall meeting later this month.

The announcement of the meeting comes less than a month after Council Member Julie Won, who will ultimately determine whether the rezoning is approved, put them on notice to do more community outreach—saying not enough had been done.

The town hall meeting is scheduled to take place on Wednesday, April 20 from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the Museum of Moving Image, located at 36-01 35th Ave. There will be two 90-minute sessions, with one starting at 4 p.m. and another at 7 p.m.

Representatives of the entire Innovation QNS development team will all be in attendance—including executives from Silverstein Properties, Kaufman Astoria Studios and BedRock Real Estate Partners. The architect from ODA New York will also be on hand, as well as an environmental consultant from AKRF.

The developers plan to create a mixed-use district between 37th Street and Northern Boulevard, bound by 35th and 36th Avenues, that would consist of more than a dozen buildings that would range in heights from nine to 27 stories.

The developers announced the plan in 2020 and have been working with the Dept. of City Planning to get their rezoning application certified. Once certified, the six-month long public review process—known as ULURP– is scheduled to begin and the application will be either approved or rejected.

The upcoming meeting will involve the development team delivering a presentation of the plan, which will be followed by a Q&A session. The town hall will be open to the public.

The developers plan to hold two additional workshops, with one in May and another in June.

The latest version of the plan calls for 2,845 apartments, of which 725 would be affordable. The developers say that hundreds of the affordable units would be priced below $1,000.

The plan also includes 250,000 square feet of office space, 200,000 square feet of retail offerings, 100,000 square feet of community space, 2 acres of public open space, and 1,465 parking spaces.

The announcement of the meetings comes in the wake of a March 8 letter than Won sent to the developers advising them to conduct a series of in-person meetings in multiple languages before getting the project certified. She also called on them to hold town halls.

“In person town halls and workshops in multiple languages must be held to ensure that neighbors have a chance to express their concerns, provide direct input on community needs, and have their questions answered by your organizations directly,” the letter read.

Won’s views are pivotal to the fate of the project since it will be her vote in the city council that will ultimately determine whether the rezoning application is approved. The city council typically votes in lockstep with the representative where a development is proposed.

The town hall meeting is scheduled to take place on Wednesday, April 20 from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the Museum of Moving Image, located at 36-01 35th Ave. (Photo Courtesy of MoMI)

email the author: news@queenspost.com

4 Comments

Click for Comments 
Adela B.

I am living in Sunnyside, the developers are looking for the signing ups in this neighborhood. They should consult people who live in Astoria, who are going to be the most affected people with this huge construction building area

Reply
Sara Ross

NY used to be known for its beautiful skyline. With all of these developers (who are more like destroyers than developers, don’t even live in NY and most aren’t even from this country), we’ll be known for our ugly, oversized structures. I miss old NYC.

Reply
35 Ave dweller

I love it. I remember when PC Richard location was an abandoned lot overgrown with weeds. They were trying to sell it for 200 thousand and nobody wanted it.

3
2
Reply
Jefferson's Ghost

Why bother going to these meetings? The decision has been made, the developes will get what they want, and local residents have absolutely no say in it. Gotta love one-party rule.

Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Adams breaks ground on major renovation of Queens Public Library’s Hollis Library

Oct. 25, 2024 By Nelson A. King

New York City Mayor Eric Adams, Queens Public Library (QPL) President Dennis M. Walcott, and New York City Department of Design and Construction (DDC) Commissioner Thomas Foley on Friday broke ground on a $7.4 million project that will completely modernize the interior of the Hollis Library QPL branch with new reading rooms, more space for computers, and additional features for visitors and staff.

LaGuardia crowned best airport in United States by Forbes Travel Guide following $8 billion transformation

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey proudly announced on Oct. 22 that Forbes Travel Guide selected LaGuardia Airport as the best airport in the United States a decade after then-Vice President Joe Biden likened the transportation hub to one that would be found in a third-world nation in a speech lamenting the state of infrastructure in America.

Forbes released its first Verified Air Travel Awards based on a survey of 5,000 hospitality and travel experts and the guide’s most well-traveled fliers. The recognition is the latest in a long list of accolades given to LaGuardia throughout the course of the airport’s historic $8 billion transformation.