fbpx
  • Subscribe & Support
  • Print Edition
    • Get Home Delivery
    • Read ePaper Online
    • Newsstand Locations
  • HV1 Magazines
  • Contact
    • Advertise
    • Submit Your Event
    • Customer Support
    • Submit A News Tip
    • Send Letter to the Editor
    • Where’s My Paper?
  • Our Newsletters
  • Manage HV1 Account
  • Free HV1 Trial
Hudson Valley One
  • News
    • Schools
    • Business
    • Sports
    • Crime
    • Politics & Government
  • What’s UP
    • Calendar Of Events
    • Subscribe to the What’s UP newsletter
  • Opinion
    • Letters
    • Columns
  • Local
    • Special Sections
    • Local History
  • Marketplace
    • All Classified Ads
    • Post a Classified Ad
  • Obituaries
  • Log Out
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Schools
    • Business
    • Sports
    • Crime
    • Politics & Government
  • What’s UP
    • Calendar Of Events
    • Subscribe to the What’s UP newsletter
  • Opinion
    • Letters
    • Columns
  • Local
    • Special Sections
    • Local History
  • Marketplace
    • All Classified Ads
    • Post a Classified Ad
  • Obituaries
  • Log Out
No Result
View All Result
Hudson Valley One
No Result
View All Result

New Paltz officials concerned about large-scale development proposal

by Terence P. Ward
February 26, 2023
in Business, Politics & Government
1
Rendering from the Lalo Group’s massing study for La Estancia, submitted to the Village of New Paltz.

One of the last remaining places within the village where homeless humans and other beings may live free, the “pit,” has long been eyed as a place for the type of infill development that urban planners prefer to suburban sprawl. Once public land, the 2.4 acres bounded by Hasbrouck, Plattekill and Elting avenues along with a municipal parking lot was sold off in dribs and drabs in the latter half of the 20th century, with its ownership eventually consolidated and sold to the Lalo Group. Luis Martinez, principal of that company, has proposed a number of different plans for building in the pit, beginning with structures that would have rivaled the height of nearby college buildings — which exist because local zoning doesn’t apply on campus — to a recent idea that adds some apartments into a mix that also includes a hotel, restaurant, banquet hall, and offices. This latest plan was pitched to village trustees at their February 22 meeting, because before it can be reviewed by planning board members there are some restrictive covenants in place which hamper the commercial potential of this land. Village trustees put those covenants in place in the 1960s and ’90s, and their successors are being asked to relax them. 

The “pit” is called that because there’s a steep grade from one side to the other. Martinez’s consultants want to work with that grade by putting parking below grade, connecting the several three-story buildings up top. One of the three buildings would include a hotel of 54 rooms, a restaurant and a 5,000-square-foot banquet hall. Another would have 2,000 square feet of retail space below 16 apartments. The last would have another 16 apartments, this above 8,000 square feet of office space — which could potentially be used by employees of Arcos LLC, an Ohio-based technology company that has offices at 15 Plattekill Avenue. Two intersecting walkways would allow pedestrians to traverse the property, but due to the grade one of those would include some sets of stairs. 

Attorney John Capello touts a long memory regarding this parcel, having represented another erstwhile developer who wanted to erect affordable housing there. This was at a time when housing was perhaps not valued as highly as it is today, and Capello recalls that an official from St. Joseph’s opposed that project because of impacts it could have had on parking for parishioners. There is certainly a history of parking and worshiping coming into conflict in this village; when free parking on Sundays was abolished, Catholics who got tickets during Easter services in 2019 were in an uproar. All of their tickets got voided, a discussion about how to update the official holiday list ensued, and ultimately the parking meters near the church were removed. However, Capello’s extensive memory did not include knowledge of covenants that limited development to 15% coverage of one of the separate parcels now part of the pit, a fact that was uncovered through a Hudson Valley One review of village board minutes from the time of the sales. The rules also mandate a minimum amount of area that must be used for parking, and preserved some village parking spaces, among other requirements. Covenants such as these are recorded in county land records along with mortgages and deeds, and would be revealed during a “title search” that is used to establish precisely what rights to a parcel of land a seller is able to transfer to a purchaser. That kind of search is needed when a purchaser or lender desires title insurance, which protects against claims to that land by other parties. 

Capello clearly wanted the conversation to be about the plans, and not the covenants, but recognizing that their role was to review and act on the covenants, the elected officials kept the focus on that legal language instead. There was considerable back-and-forth about the intent, since the minutes are not particularly clear. When pressed about why in eight years no one on the developer’s team had brought up the covenants until confronted with them, Capello noted that some of the adjacent land is also subject to some of the same covenants, and was sold off separately after being subdivided; it doesn’t appear to the attorney that there was any enforcement of those covenants regarding those other building projects. The crux of that argument is that village officials were equally ignorant, and cannot enforce rules arbitrarily. Capello offered several other arguments, as attorneys are wont to do, but eventually the mayor got around to asking for developers to pay for a land-use attorney and a municipal planner to review those old documents and decide how they should be interpreted. It was agreed that $12,500 would be placed in escrow to pay those consultants, to start. 

However that review turns out, it appears that there will be more legal posturing — and possibly even a court case — before it’s clear whether this project can move forward, and in what form. 

Tags: members
Join the family! Grab a free month of HV1 from the folks who have brought you substantive local news since 1972. We made it 50 years thanks to support from readers like you. Help us keep real journalism alive.
- Geddy Sveikauskas, Publisher

Terence P. Ward

Terence P Ward resides in New Paltz, where he reports on local events, writes books about religious minorities, tends a wild garden and communes with cats.

Related Posts

Korolkoff-Nagele recount
Politics & Government

Korolkoff-Nagele recount

June 26, 2025
Is the New Paltz supervisor race finished?
Politics & Government

Is the New Paltz supervisor race finished?

June 25, 2025
Letters to the editor: September 11, 2024 (Winston Farm, Shady dump, hostages and more)
Politics & Government

Public concerns outweigh support for Winston Farm proposal

June 25, 2025
Gotto, Rogers in Democratic primary contest for New Paltz town supervisor
Politics & Government

Tim Roger’s acceptance announcement for supervisor primary in New Paltz

June 25, 2025
Ulster County sets sites for early voting this fall
News

Primary election 2025:
 Key results in the Ulster County legislature, Kingston, New Paltz, Woodstock and Hurley

June 26, 2025
Woodstock to review police jobs as costs rise
Community

McKenna takes the heat again

June 22, 2025
Next Post
Rural bus stop locations can be contentious

Eight students injured in Kingston school bus accident

Please login to join discussion

Weather

Kingston, NY
84°
Partly Cloudy
5:24 am8:36 pm EDT
Feels like: 86°F
Wind: 5mph WSW
Humidity: 45%
Pressure: 29.79"Hg
UV index: 6
FriSatSun
82°F / 55°F
86°F / 64°F
91°F / 68°F
powered by Weather Atlas

Subscribe

Independent. Local. Substantive. Subscribe now.

×
We've expanded coverage and need your support. Subscribe now for unlimited access -- free article(s) remain for the month.
View Subscription Offers Sign In
  • Subscribe & Support
  • Print Edition
  • HV1 Magazines
  • Contact
  • Our Newsletters
  • Manage HV1 Account
  • Free HV1 Trial

© 2022 Ulster Publishing

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Schools
    • Business
    • Sports
    • Crime
    • Politics & Government
  • What’s Happening
    • Calendar Of Events
    • Art
    • Books
    • Kids
    • Lifestyle & Wellness
    • Food & Drink
    • Music
    • Nature
    • Stage & Screen
  • Opinions
    • Letters
    • Columns
  • Local
    • Special Sections
    • Local History
  • Marketplace
    • All Classified Ads
    • Post a Classified Ad
  • Obituaries
  • Subscribe & Support
  • Contact Us
    • Customer Support
    • Advertise
    • Submit A News Tip
  • Print Edition
    • Read ePaper Online
    • Newsstand Locations
    • Where’s My Paper
  • HV1 Magazines
  • Manage HV1 Account
  • Log In
  • Free HV1 Trial
  • Subscribe to Our Newsletters
    • Hey Kingston
    • New Paltz Times
    • Woodstock Times
    • Week in Review

© 2022 Ulster Publishing