City eyes new zoning rules for 415 blocks in Jamaica
Times
Ledger, September 12, 2002
Zoning
regulations in Jamaica need overhauling and the city Department of
Planning is ready to take it on. The department introduced a
preliminary proposal to update and refine zoning regulations in a
415-block area at Tuesday’s meeting of the Greater...
Zoning regulations in Jamaica need overhauling
and the city Department of Planning is ready to take it
on.
The department introduced a preliminary proposal to
update and refine zoning regulations in a 415-block area at
Tuesday’s meeting of the Greater Jamaica Development Corporation’s
downtown committee.
The proposal is based on a two-year study
of the area, including Jamaica, South Jamaica, Hollis and St.
Albans, said Deborah Carney, deputy director of the Queens planning
office. The study discovered most of the zoning laws are antiquated
and inadequate, she said.
“The zoning in place here is 40
years old,” said John Young, director of the Queens planning office.
“The opportunity is ripe. Now is the time to figure out what the
future holds.”
Planning Department officials, anxious to spur
economic growth, hope to use as a springboard recent developments
such as the AirTrain light rail system linking downtown Jamaica to
Kennedy Airport, the Jamaica Multiplex, the Jamaica Center and the
new Family and Civil courts by updating zoning rules, Young
said.
“Our purpose in this proposal is to encourage
compatible land uses,” Carney said. “The zoning does not allow or
accommodate the development or the growth we see in the
area.”
The proposal, still in its early stages, has several
components necessary to refine the mismatched zoning, Carney
said.
Goals include providing direction and incentives for
commercial and industrial growth in underused areas, especially in
South Jamaica; directing new commercial development along roadways
that can support traffic that would be generated, such as Hillside
Avenue and Sutphin Boulevard; and establishing a special downtown
development district to promote growth.
“The hope is to
retrigger interest from private developers,” Carney said. “The
challenge has always been over the past three decades to narrow the
gap between public and private investment.”
The proposal also
seeks to reinforce zoning regulations limiting two-family homes in
places zoned for apartments, Carney said.
“We want to develop
a strategy to strengthen the commercial and industrial areas in
Jamaica (while) all the time preserving the adjacent residential
areas,” she said.
Before submitting its final proposal, Young
said, the Planning Department will solicit community support and
conduct an environmental impact study and a public
review.