Say What Now? Luxury New York Condo Will Have Separate ‘Poor Door’ Entrance for Lower Income Residents

BY: Denver Sean

Published 10 years ago

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New York City’s Department of Housing Preservation and Development gave approval for a luxury high-rise condo building to implement a separate entrance for lower-income residents to use.

That’s right — if you’re a ‘poor’ resident living in this building you have to go around back and use the ‘poor door’.

via The Huffington Post:

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The 33-story building, now under construction at 40 Riverside Boulevard on the Upper West Side, will contain 219 luxury units facing the Hudson River. There will also be a segment on floors two through six that will contain 55 street-facing units for the building’s poorer residents. This segment will have its own entrance.

The more affordable units will be given to families of four whose annual income is $51,540 or less — about 60 percent of the area’s median income.

Residents living in the lower-income part of 40 Riverside will be prohibited from using the attractive amenities commonly found in Extell properties, including a gym and a swimming pool.

Extell’s proposal, which has been widely described as a “poor door” policy, was approved under the city’s Inclusionary Housing program, which allows developers to use more square footage than they’d ordinarily be allowed to — provided they set aside some units in their building for affordable housing. For doing so, developers also receive millions in tax breaks.

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Gothamist reports that arrangements like the one planned for 40 Riverside are not uncommon in New York.

Still, ever since plans for the separate entrance were revealed last August, city officials and community members have been demanding that Extell officials jettison the policy for a more inclusive one.

“This ‘separate but equal’ arrangement is abominable and has no place in the 21st century, let alone on the Upper West Side,” Assemblywoman Linda B. Rosenthal told the blog West Side Rag last year. “A mandatory affordable housing plan is not license to segregate lower-income tenants from those who are well-off.”

As The New York Times noted in May, minorities and the elderly largely make up the city’s rent-regulated population.

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We can’t believe we’re having a ‘separate but equal’ conversation in 2014. Hello, racism classism .

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