The builders chosen to construct an reasonably priced housing complicated in Manhattan’s Elizabeth St. Backyard sued Mayor Adams and his high deputy, Randy Mastro, on Wednesday over their try to dam the challenge by designating the positioning as “parkland.”
The lawsuit, introduced by a consortium of builders and social providers suppliers tapped to supervise the long-stalled challenge, is asking a Manhattan Supreme Courtroom decide to instantly impose a brief restraining order barring the designation from turning into official.
Particularly, the plaintiffs charged Adams and Mastro, his first deputy mayor, violated town’s so-called ULURP land use course of by taking the bizarre step earlier this month of declaring the Nolita backyard parkland, a transfer that would successfully prohibit building on the positioning.
Below a ULURP software accepted by the Metropolis Council, the positioning has for nearly a decade been earmarked for constructing 123 condominium models for low-income seniors, and the lawsuit says the parkland designation doesn’t override that.
“This was a lawless act,” the swimsuit prices of the parkland order from Adams and Mastro.
“[The designation] was done — without any advance notice nor warning to petitioners, despite ongoing conversations between petitioners’ representatives and senior members of the Adams administration — to prevent the incoming mayor from implementing the project and to deliver by unlawful fiat an unearned victory to the well-heeled private interests that had fought Haven Green from the start,” says the swimsuit, introduced by Pennrose, Habitat For Humanity and Riseboro, the entities beforehand tapped by town to construct and run the senior housing.
The Elizabeth Avenue Backyard is pictured final October. (Barry Williams for New York Each day Information)
In an announcement, Mastro stated the Adams administration’s designation was authorized and argued it’ll make sure the backyard — which is at the moment run by a personal nonprofit that determines hours of opening and shutting — will turn into open to the general public.
“It is unfortunate that these developers have now brought a frivolous lawsuit to try to leverage a better deal in negotiations with the city,” Mastro’s assertion stated. “The city has followed all proper procedures to designate this site as parkland, and this is a meritless lawsuit that does not have New Yorkers’ best interest in mind.”
A Mamdani spokeswoman didn’t instantly return a request for touch upon the brand new lawsuit.
Adams and his administration had been for years main backers of the redevelopment plan, which includes constructing the housing for seniors whereas additionally preserving elements of the beloved greenspace. However after Mastro got here onboard as Adams’ high deputy, the mayor introduced he was opposing the event.
Adams, who dumped his reelection bid amid fallout from his corruption indictment, has as mayor made it an enormous focus to construct extra flats at a time town’s reeling from a extreme housing disaster. To that finish, critics say his reversal on the Elizabeth St. Backyard was hypocritical.
Adams and Mastro have countered they’ve secured different websites in close by neighborhoods for creating reasonably priced housing. However these websites would want to endure town land use course of, which might take years, whereas the Elizabeth St. Backyard web site is on the market for quick growth.
Of their swimsuit, the Elizabeth St. Backyard builders and housing suppliers argued that not blocking the parkland designation can be “dangerous.”
“If allowed to stand, respondents’ actions would establish dangerous precedents: that the mayor, or any mayoral agency, could unilaterally overturn a completed ULURP by executive fiat; that a land-use decision duly vetted, debated, and approved by the City Council may be silently reversed without public process; and that the rule of law governing New York City’s land-use system can be disregarded and displaced by political convenience and preference,” the swimsuit says.
“That is not what the City Charter mandates, and it is not how a lawful government functions.”

