The property also includes 8 acres of water rights and will feature a publicly accessible waterfront park, as is required by city regulations. “In a perfect world, development will begin in the middle of next year,” he said.
It was originally zoned for manufacturing until about 2005, when a development firm called Bayrock Group bought the site and sought to rezone it for residential use. State inspectors have been inspecting the site to check for evidence of any contaminated soil dumped there.
The city modified the zoning to specifically allow for the development of 52 single-family homes, according to area lawmakers, but Bayrock went bust and the property descended into foreclosure.
Barone said the development would be a boon for the area, setting a precedent on converting old manufacturing sites into residential tracts in character with the rest of the sleepy neighborhood.
Nevertheless, changing industrial sites to residential properties often involves environmental remediation, and the Whitestone lot was no exception. The soil at the site was contaminated and needed to be entirely replaced before a shovel could hit the ground. It was entered into the state’s Brownfield Cleanup program, which works with developers to clean toxic sites and prep them for development.
The court-appointed receiver for the property hired the construction arm of Barone to perform complete remediation at the site, which concluded in the fall of 2011.
State Senator Tony Avella has asked the state Department of Environmental Protection to look into the replacement soil to ensure it is not itself contaminated. Avella had previously sent a letter to the DEC, urging them to investigate the site for dumping of contaminated material, a prospect Barone found insulting.
The developer contends he has logs to show where each ounce of soil came, proving it is clean, and inspections undertaken by DEC and 24-hour security have made it impossible to sneak any unauthorized material onto the property.