Save America's Clocks, Inc. v. City of New York

52 Misc. 3d 282, 28 N.Y.S.3d 571
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 2016
StatusPublished

This text of 52 Misc. 3d 282 (Save America's Clocks, Inc. v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Save America's Clocks, Inc. v. City of New York, 52 Misc. 3d 282, 28 N.Y.S.3d 571 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Lynn R. Kotler, J.

This is a CPLR article 78 proceeding which arises from a building owner’s plan to convert an interior landmark to private residential use. Petitioners seek, inter alia, a judgment annulling respondent New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission’s grant of a certificate of appropriateness (COA) which allows respondent Civic Center Community Group Broadway LLC (the owner), the owner of the building at 346 Broadway, also known as 108 Leonard Street in Manhattan (the building), to perform certain work at the building. Petitioners maintain that this work will “permanently alter the previously-pristine and unaltered 1897 landmark Clock, converting it from a historic, one-of-a-kind mechanical clock . . . into a standard modern-day electric clock.”

Petitioners further seek declarations that: (1) the grant of the COA was “tantamount to a rescission in violation of lawful [285]*285procedure”; (2) an application for exclusive private use of an interior landmark cannot properly be the subject of an appropriateness review; and (3) the Commission has the power to require the respondents to keep the tower clock operable and mechanical, to keep the clock serviced and maintained, and to keep the clock tower suite (hereinafter defined) open to the public. The parties have previously agreed to limit the scope of this litigation to only issues pertaining to the clock tower suite. Finally, petitioners seek an order enjoining the respondents, their employees, agents, successors, etc., from denying public access to the clock tower suite, from dismantling, disassembling, de-mechanizing, and/or electrifying the clock, and directing respondents to maintain the clock tower suite and the clock in good condition and repair.

Petitioners style themselves as a coalition composed of the following entities and individuals. Save America’s Clocks, Inc. (SAC) preserves and maintains America’s public clocks. The Historic Districts Council, Inc. is a nonprofit dedicated to preserving the City’s historic neighborhoods and buildings.

Tribeca Trust, Inc. is another nonprofit which seeks “to educate the public about Tribeca’s history and architectural heritage and to protect and enhance its architectural character.” The individual petitioners are Marvin Schneider, Forest Markowitz, Thomas Bernardin, Christopher DeSantis, Jeremy Woodoff and Alanna Heiss. Mr. Schneider is the City’s official clock master. Mr. Markowitz is an assistant clock master. Mr. Bernardin is founder and president of SAC. Mr. DeSantis is a horological expert. Mr. Woodoff is a member of SAC’s Board of Directors and is a City Planner presently employed in the Historic Preservation Office of the City’s Department of Design and Construction. Finally, Ms. Heiss, operating through The Institute for Art and Urban Resources, established an exhibition and artist studio program in the clock tower suite from 1972 until 2013.

There are three groups of respondents: (1) the owner; (2) The Peebles Corporation, 346 Broadway LLC, El Ad US Holding, Inc., El Ad 346 Development LLC and Beyer Blinder Bell, Architects and Planners, LLP (BBB); and (3) the City of New York, Office of the Deputy Mayor for Housing and Economic Development, New York City Department of Buildings and the Commission. Respondents have answered the petition and oppose the relief requested. The court’s decision follows.

[286]*286Facts and Arguments

The Clock and Clock Tower Suite

This petition concerns the landmark 1897 E. Howard Watch & Clock Company’s No. 4 Striking Tower Clock, one of the few remaining mechanical public tower clocks in the country (the clock). The clock is situated within a suite of rooms (the clock tower suite) in a tower perched atop the landmark former New York Life Insurance building. The building itself was constructed between 1894 and 1898 and is described in the Commission’s February 10, 1987 designation list 187 LP-1513 (the 1987 designation) as “[a] monumental freestanding skyscraper in the neo-Italian Renaissance style” (the 1987 designation at 1). New York Life Insurance moved out of the building in or about 1928. The building was subsequently acquired by the City in 1968 and housed various city agencies and offices.

The clock tower suite consists of four floors, beginning at the fourteenth floor of the building. Until 2013, the fourteenth floor was used as an art gallery and contains a spiral metal staircase which leads to a landing where the pendulum of the clock is situated and continues to the fifteenth floor clock tower machinery room. The clock tower suite further consists of a small sixteenth floor containing the clockworks and clockfaces and a seventeenth floor belfry, containing the clock’s 5,000-pound bell and hammer. The 1987 designation describes the clock as follows:

“The clock had fallen into disrepair and was restored in 1980 by Marvin Schneider and Eric Reiner, city workers who devoted their spare time to the project. With their colleague George Whaley, they rewind the clock each week. . . . The clock is one of the few remaining in New York which has not been electrified” (the 1987 designation at 13).

On May 25, 1989, a notice of designation was recorded with the City Register which designated as an interior landmark certain portions of the building interior including the clock tower suite. According to the 1987 designation, the Commission found in pertinent part that landmark status was warranted because the interior portions of the building have

“a special character, special historical and aesthetic interest and value as part of the development, heritage and cultural characteristics of New York City, and the Interior or parts thereof are thirty years old or more, and . . . the Interior is one [287]*287which is customarily open and accessible to the public, and to which the public is customarily invited” (the 1987 designation at 16).

The City sold the building to the owner by deed dated December 11, 2013. The deed for the building specifically states that ownership of the building is subject to the notice of designation.

The COA Application

This proceeding arises from the Commission’s issuance of a COA dated May 29, 2015 pursuant to New York City Landmarks Law (Administrative Code of City of NY, tit 25, ch 3) § 25-307 in response to the owner’s application dated August 13, 2014. The COA permits the owner “to construct a rooftop addition and bulkheads, replace windows, install a canopy, alter the facades and relocate and alter interior finishes” and “electrify[ ] the clock operation.” The owner’s proposed work would convert the building from an office building to a condominium with 144 units.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 Misc. 3d 282, 28 N.Y.S.3d 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/save-americas-clocks-inc-v-city-of-new-york-nysupct-2016.