Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Remediation is overrated


From the Queens Chronicle:

The site of a development that went bust in Howard Beach sold this week for $4.5 million and is expected to become retail stores and an automobile dealership, according to the individual who handled the transaction.

“The previous owner ran out of financing,” said Massey Knakal First Vice President of Sales Stephen Preuss, who handled the Jan. 14 sale of the 7.5-acre site at South Conduit Avenue and Linden Boulevard. “It has been sitting there for about three years untouched.”

Cobblestone Estates, the previous owner, worked with Bank of New York to sell the site to Brooklyn-based JSB Realty.

Massey Knakal officials said there had been an approved plan for a private gated community consisting of 237 units at the site. Additionally, Community Board 10 Chairwoman Betty Braton said the area had been rezoned several years ago, after which the community had expected a commercial complex at the site named Lindenwood Commons.

Foundation plumbing and basement floors for 111 units were completed by the previous owner, according to a statement from Massey Knakal. Preuss said Cobblestone Estates likely spent “a few million” on the work that has been done up to now.

Preuss said the new owner, who could not be reached for comment, expects to convert the site into retail space and a car dealership. He did not specify what kind of store or stores may be built at the site, though a statement from Massey Knakal did note the space is “ideal for a prime retail or mixed-used site for a big box national tenancy or strip center.”

The $4.5 million JSB Realty purchased the site for is under market value, in part because the group will likely have to pay millions of dollars to address environmental concerns, according to Preuss.

“There needs to be remediation with the soil,” he said. “It used to be a transfer station.”


I like how they were originally planning to build houses on the site of a garbage dump without remediation.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

This site is on the Brooklyn-Queens border. There used to be a stream running here. Expect a high water table, construction overruns.

Anonymous said...

Land was over-filled and I;d bet there are some real clean up problems the owner will have to correct to develop there.

Anonymous said...

It costs seven bucks a cubic foot to take soil out of the ground, put it on a conveyor belt and literally wash it with sprayed water.

Remediation said...

Hmm, I don't think remediation is overrated. it is more than just washing soil. it's actually a very complex process.