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AM: Discomfort over Plan for Webster Comfort Inn

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  • AM: Discomfort over Plan for Webster Comfort Inn

    Discomfort over Plan for Webster Comfort Inn

    Norwood News, NY
    July 14 2006

    By ALEX KRATZ

    On a recent Friday afternoon, Korean War veteran Harold Hekimian
    pointed to the side of his house where sand from the construction
    site next door has spilled onto his property, under his porch, into
    his basement and onto his backyard.

    Wearing a linen bathrobe and sporting a shaved head - the result of
    a four-year battle with stomach cancer - Hekimian loudly laments the
    imminent arrival of his new neighbor: an 80-room Comfort Inn.

    A plywood fence runs suffocatingly close alongside Hekimian's house
    on Webster Avenue between East 202nd and 203rd streets. He can only
    imagine how intrusive a five-story motel will be on him and his sister,
    Virginia, both in their 70s.

    "They're taking away my oxygen," Hekimian says, putting his hand to
    his chest. "I won't be able to breathe."

    That same day, June 30, the hotel's developer, Sam Chang of Floral
    Park, received design approval from the Buildings Department for a
    five-story, 80-room motel on the slender plot of land wedged tightly
    between Hekimian's house and an auto body shop to the north. Chang has
    yet to apply for a building permit, but that's mostly a formality,
    said Jennifer Givner, a spokesperson for the department. All Chang
    needs is the proper insurance documents and the permit will almost
    certainly be granted, Givner said.

    Queens architect Michael Kang, who designed the motel and has worked
    with Chang for 12 years on other New York hotel projects, refused to
    offer any details about the hotel without the developer's permission.
    Chang specializes in low-cost hotels and has constructed more than
    30 in New York, mostly in Manhattan. As of publication, Chang failed
    to return several calls from the Norwood News.

    Because the area is zoned for heavy commercial buildings, Chang's
    development company, McSam LLC, has a right to build the hotel
    regardless of community opposition.

    "They have an 'as of right'," said Rita Kessler, the district manager
    for Community Board 7, talking about the developer's "right" to build
    on commercially zoned Webster. "But we're going to fight them."

    At a Board 7 Land Use Committee meeting two weeks ago, Chang sent
    his lawyer, Patrick Jones, to discuss the project with Board members.
    Kessler and other members peppered the lawyer with questions.

    "He had no answers for anything," Kessler said.

    Instead, the lawyer jotted down questions in his notebook and said he
    would bring them up with his boss. Kessler also gave Jones something
    else to give to Chang - a copy of a petition, created by the Hekimians,
    with more than 800 signatures of people opposing the new motel.

    With PS/MS 20 just a stone's throw away, Kessler and others are
    concerned about who will inhabit the rooms and what they will be used
    for. The motel will be available for short-stay rentals, Kessler said,
    meaning customers will be able to rent rooms for less than four hours
    at a time.

    "Webster certainly is not a tourist attraction," Kessler said, adding
    that she's concerned the hotel will also be used to house the homeless.

    Father Richard Gorman, chair of Community Board 12, sympathizes with
    the community's plight. He's fought against what he describes as
    "no tell motels" or "hot sheet motels" for more than a decade.

    Gorman says a motel like Chang's in an area like Webster Avenue is
    only designed for two types of people - drug addicts and prostitutes
    looking for a private place to conduct illegal activities or homeless
    families sent there by the city because there is nowhere else to put
    them. The city pays out of the way motels up to $90 a night to house
    homeless families, Gorman says.

    Recently, Gorman says, there was a brutal murder in one of the dozen
    motels in his district in the northeast Bronx. The community has
    been cut out of the approval process, Gorman says, even when motel
    developments directly affect the community surrounding it. "To have
    it across the street from a school, I would be very concerned,"
    Gorman says.

    Barbara Rondon, who has worked at PS/MS 20 for the past 10 years
    and lives in the area, agreed. "We don't need that [a motel] here,"
    she said. "We're trying to bring this area up, not bring it back down."

    Back on Hekimian's porch, Harold says "hello" and smiles to everyone
    passing by on the sidewalk. Both he and his sister were born in
    this house. Their parents, Armenian immigrants, fled Turkish death
    squads in 1915 and ended up here in Norwood in 1927. The Hekimians
    remember when Webster was a narrow cobblestone road trafficked with
    horse carriages. Virginia points to where the family's lush green
    lawn spread out to what is now gray concrete.

    Harold Hekimian looks out from his porch and sweeps his hand over the
    neighborhood - a place where the siblings now have myriad immigrant
    friends, mostly young families, from places like Ghana and Chile.
    They could be the next Hekimians.

    "We're used to it here," Hekimian says. "Where are we going to go?"

    "But Harold," Virginia says, "you're not going to like it here when
    the motel comes."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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