Matter of Landmark West! v. Burden

2004 NY Slip Op 50331(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court, New York County
DecidedApril 15, 2004
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2004 NY Slip Op 50331(U) (Matter of Landmark West! v. Burden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, New York County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Landmark West! v. Burden, 2004 NY Slip Op 50331(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

Matter of Landmark West! v Burden (2004 NY Slip Op 50331(U)) [*1]
Matter of Landmark West! v Burden
2004 NY Slip Op 50331(U)
Decided on April 15, 2004
Supreme Court, New York County
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on April 15, 2004
Supreme Court, New York County


In the Matter of LANDMARK WEST!; ARLENE SIMON, individually and in her capacity as President of LANDMARK WEST!; the HISTORIC DISTRICTS COUNCIL; DOCOMOMO US/New York Tri-State; CHRISTOPHER LONDON; SUE MELLINS; SOPHIA DEBOER and JULIET HARTFORD, Petitioners, 

against

AMANDA M. BURDEN, as Chair of the New York City Planning Commission; the New York City Planning Commission; ROBERT R. KULIKOWSKI, Assistant to the Mayor for the Deputy Mayor for Economic Development and Rebuilding; ANDREW ALPER, President of the New York City Economic Development Corporation; MARTHA K. HIRST, Commissioner of the New York City Department of Citywide Administrative Services; the MUSEUM OF ARTS AND DESIGN; and HOLLY HOTCHNER, Director of the Museum of Arts and Design, Respondents.




Index No. 119036/03

URBAN ENVIRONMENTAL LAW CENTER, 475 Park Avenue

South, 16th Floor, New York, NY 10016, Attorneys for the Petitioner,

By: Antonia Bryson, Esq.

MICHAEL A. CARDOZO, CORPORATION COUNSEL OF THE

CITY OF NEW YORK, 100 Church Street, New York, New York

10007, Attorneys for the City Respondents, By: Christopher Reo, Esq.

Senior Counsel, Michael Burger, Esq. Assistant Corporation Counsel

STROOCK & STROOCK & LAVAN LLP, 180 Maiden Lane, New

York, NY 10038, Attorneys for the Museum of Arts and Design, By:

Regan A. Shulman, Esq., Ross Moskowitz, Esq.

WALTER B. TOLUB, J.

Two Columbus Circle, known to many of us as the old Huntington Hartford Museum, has in its brief history not been a stranger to controversy. Its detractors have characterized it as "the lollipop building", an oddity of dubious architectural distinction and "Stone's Moorish Tomb". Its defenders claim it is visually striking, architecturally significant, and in the words of one supporter, one of a class of "buildings that express political Zeitgeist", (Reply, Ex 4) "remnants of the ideas that shaped their age" (ibid.).

Petitioners seek, by this proceeding, to halt the sale of the building from the City of New York to the Museum of Arts and Design, which plans to refurbish and renovate the building. According to petitioners, an environmental assessment of the sale's impact on the area's historic resources incorrectly concluded that the building itself was not an historic resource, and that the determination was arbitrary, capricious, and in violation of applicable law.

Architectural History

Commissioned by A&P Supermarket heir Huntington Hartford in 1955, Two Columbus Circle ("Two Columbus Circle" or "the building") was originally envisioned to be a monumental structure, a major cultural institution and an anti-modernist gallery. Edward Durrell Stone, considered one of America's most important and admired architects of the post-World War II era, designed the building in 1964. [*2]

The building's form is based on Stone's design of the US Embassy in New Delhi, India. The nine-story building is a poured concrete structure sheathed in white, gray-veined Vermont marble. An open concrete Venetian-inspired arcade with lollipop-like columns inlaid with circular panels of red granite supports the building's base.

The building's almost windowless facade has distinctive Moorish filigreed masonry details, including small porthole-like windows that line the building's outer edges from the second to the ninth floors and crown the ninth story in a wide horizontal band. A few small porthole windows also cover the central portion of the building's south facade and border the top of the building's ground floor arcade. A second open Venetian-styled arcade or loggia encircles the building at its eighth and ninth stories. At the top sits a small windowless one-story mechanical penthouse set back from the building's edges.

Because it sits on an irregularly shaped lot, no two dimensions of the building's structure are the same. The building's north facade is a concave wall that conforms with the curve of Columbus Circle.

For years, individuals and organizations have unsuccessfully sought landmark designation for Two Columbus Circle from the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC). In 1996, the Research Department and Designation Committee of the LPC declined to recommend the building to the full Commission for consideration.

By a letter dated June 5, 2000, preservation groups urged the Commissioner of the New York State Office of Parks Recreation, and Historic Places (OPRHP) to place the building on the State and National Registers of Historic Places. Nothing in the record before this court indicates that the Commissioner responded to this letter, and the court regards this as a declination.

On June 14, 2002, the New York City Economic Development Corporation (EDC) "conditionally designated" a proposal for the sale and redevelopment of the building at Two Columbus Circle submitted by the Museum of Arts and Design. The museum plans to replace the building's existing exterior cladding with a panel system complimentary and consistent with the existing buildings along Central Park. New windows would be added to the building's facades, the building's open ground floor arcade will be enclosed with glass walls, and the ground floor will be extended to the building's footprint edge to create a lobby/reception area and museum store.

Procedure

The proposed disposition of City-owned property triggered New York City's Uniform Land Use Review Procedure (ULURP), which requires a determination of environmental impact under City Environmental Quality Review (CEQR) rules (62 RCNY § 5-01 et seq.). On August 30, 2002, the Office of the Deputy Mayor for Economic Development and Rebuilding (Deputy Mayor's Office) assumed "lead agency" status to determine the environmental impact under CEQR. An environmental consultant prepared an extensive draft and final version of an Environmental Assessment Statement (EAS) for the Two Columbus Circle Project. On March 26, 2003, Robert Kulikowski, on behalf of the Deputy Mayor's Office, issued a negative declaration, declaring that the proposed sale of the building would not have a significant adverse impact on the environment. The finding was based on a review of the information contained in the final EAS.

During this time, preservation groups again urged the Commissioner of the New York State OPRHP to list the building as an historic place. However, by a letter dated January 6, 2003, the commissioner stated,

"Since we have not been informed of any state or federal involvement in the rehabilitation [of the building], we prefer not to issue a formal determination of eligibility at this time, but rather to try to affect a satisfactory outcome by working with new owners in a positive manner.

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