Sunday, July 2, 2023

Van Cortlandt Park Alliance - Volunteer with us this Summer!

 



Volunteer Clean Up Day
Wednesday, July 5, meeting at 9am

Summer holidays bring lots of visitors to the park.

Volunteers are needed to help park staff tidy up.
This week, lend a hand after the July 4th weekend! 

We provide gloves and materials to help keep this park in tip-top shape.

You provide can-do spirit and sturdy shoes for walking!

RSVP Now.

Meet in front of the Van Cortlandt Golf House.

 

Forest Fridays
Fridays - Meet at 9am
With 640 acres of urban woodland, Van Cortlandt Park could use your help! 
In May, we are focusing on the Northwest Woods in the park.

RSVP Now.

Meet at VCPA Garden & Compost Site.

 

Garden Tune Up Tuesdays
Tuesdays, July 11 + 25, 10am to 1pm
Let’s tend to our growing veggies together.  
Volunteers are needed for maintaining the compost bins, weeding, planting, and building garden beds. 

Meet at VCPA Garden and Compost Site.

 

Water Chestnut Wednesdays
Wednesdays, July 12 to August 9 - Meet at 9amHop into a pair of waders or a canoe for Water Chestnut Wednesdays as we work together to maintain the health of Hester & Piero's Mill Pond. Water chestnut is an invasive aquatic species that, if left unchecked, can disrupt the local ecosystem.  VCPA provides all necessary gear. You bring the can-do attitude!

RSVP Now

Meet at the southern end of Van Cortlandt Golf House.

 

Support Our Work in Van Cortlandt Park

Make a Donation
The park is really big. Our staff is really small. Only with your help can we grow our capacity, hire more staff, and take on projects to improve Van Cortlandt Park… for YOU!  Please consider a gift to Van Cortlandt Park Alliance today.


VCPA Merch Shop!

Show your love for Van Cortlandt Park while supporting the Alliance!

Shop Now!

 

Become a Member
Members get VCPA merch and invitations to member only hikes while supporting their favorite park!

Join Now


Van Cortlandt Park Alliance
80 Van Cortlandt Park, Ste. E1
Bronx, NY 10463
718-601-1460
http://vancortlandt.org

D.A. Bragg Announces Indictment of Man in Unprovoked, Fatal Midtown Stabbing

 

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg, Jr., announced the indictment of NISEAN GRAVES, 34, for the fatal stabbing of 36-year-old Antonio Eggleston during broad daylight on the street in Midtown. GRAVES is charged in a New York State Supreme Court indictment with one count of Murder in the Second Degree.[1]  

“As alleged, Nisean Graves initiated the stabbing of a stranger that ended in a life being taken far too soon,” said District Attorney Bragg. “In addition, this public display of violence at a busy intersection threatened the safety of the many other New Yorkers passing by. Although we cannot undo this murder, our dedicated prosecutors will work hard to ensure there is appropriate justice for this alleged attack.”

According to court documents and statements made on the record, on June 9, 2023, at approximately 8:15 a.m., Eggleston was in Midtown with a friend when GRAVES approached and punched him without any provocation. The confrontation continued and spilled over into a fight in the middle of the street on West 30th Street and 7th Avenue. During the fight, GRAVES pulled out a knife and swung several times at Eggleston while holding it.

As Eggleston, who was unarmed, kicked at GRAVES, GRAVES stabbed him in the chest. GRAVES walked away and Eggleston fell to the ground, bleeding. Eggleston was pronounced dead at the hospital.
 
GRAVES was immediately arrested near the scene. When arrested, officers recovered a bloody knife from his pocket.
 
Assistant D.A.s Adam Birnbaum and Katelyn Damanis are handling the prosecution of the case under the supervision of Assistant D.A.s Annie Siegel and Harrison Schweiloch (Deputy Chiefs of Trial Bureau 60), Charles Whitt (Chief of Trial Bureau 60), and Executive Assistant D.A. Lisa DelPizzo (Chief of the Trial Division). Summer Law Fellows Rianna Iorillo and Alphonso Gentry, and Investigative Analyst Alexander Fogg are also providing valuable assistance with this case.

D.A. Bragg thanked the NYPD, in particular Detectives Robert Rivera (Midtown South Precinct Detective Squad) and Oscar Diaz (Manhattan South Homicide Squad).

[1] The charges contained in the indictment are merely allegations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty. All factual recitations are derived from documents filed in court and statements made on the record in court.

MAYOR ADAMS, DEPARTMENT OF SANITATION, SANITATION FOUNDATION ANNOUNCE NEW PHILANTHROPIC INITIATIVE TO PROVIDE SIDEWALK CLEANING TO HIGH-TRAFFIC COMMERCIAL CORRIDORS

 

New York City Mayor Eric Adams, the New York City Department of Sanitation (DSNY), and the Sanitation Foundation (DSNY’s official nonprofit) announced a major new philanthropic undertaking focused on cleaning high-traffic commercial corridors across the city in a video released. Beginning on Nostrand Avenue, from Myrtle Avenue to Eastern Parkway, and Utica Avenue, from Fulton Street to East New York Avenue, in Brooklyn, this new initiative — dubbed the “Clean City Alliance” — will provide sidewalk cleaning to some of the busiest areas that do not have Business Improvement Districts (BID) to help organize cleanliness efforts in all five boroughs. Property owners are legally responsible for the cleanliness of the sidewalk in front of their property, as well as 18 inches into the street. In many neighborhoods, businesses pay to form BIDs, which then contract with outside groups for sidewalk cleaning, making a noticeable difference in sidewalk cleanliness and pedestrian experience. The “Clean City Alliance” will bring philanthropy and the private sector together and will begin by servicing sidewalks in parts of Crown Heights and Bed-Stuy — a neighborhood that does not have a BID — and will expand to other busy commercial corridors without BIDs across the city. The “Clean City Alliance” will also be a source of employment opportunity, hiring locally across the city. 

Clean City Alliance

Mayor Adams, Commissioner Tisch, and Caryl Englander announced the “Clean City Alliance” in a newly released video.

“Every part of our city deserves to be clean — every street and every neighborhood,” said Mayor Adams. “With the ‘Clean City Alliance,’ we are building on our ‘Get Stuff Clean’ initiatives, partnering with philanthropic and business partners to improve New Yorkers’ quality of life, and helping businesses thrive. Thank you to the leaders from across New York who are stepping up, donating to this program, and doing their part to make a clean city a reality for all across the five boroughs.”

 

“There are so many important reasons the busy commercial corridors of Crown Heights should have the same level of investment by the business community as Midtown Manhattan,” said Chief Advisor to the Mayor Chaplain Ingrid Lewis-Martin. “This is the beginning of a paradigm shift to level the playing field. It starts here it, starts now, and will spread to other disenfranchised neighborhoods. This initiative is good for residents and good for business.”

 

“Thanks to the combined work of the Sanitation Foundation and DSNY, today we are recognizing and meeting the needs of neighborhoods citywide that have not historically received the daily maintenance and cleaning benefits of a formal business improvement district,” said Deputy Mayor for Operations Meera Joshi. “New Yorkers everywhere deserve clean, livable streets and sidewalks, and today’s announcement is another significant step towards that goal.”

 

“Over the last year and a half, Mayor Adams has invested in clean streets, and now with the ‘Clean City Alliance,’ we can engage our philanthropic community in taking that work to the next level,” said DSNY Commissioner Jessica Tisch. “Along with the way we’ve revolutionized trash collection, this will make a deep and meaningful difference in the pedestrian experience of the city.”

 

“The difference in the cleanliness of our streets is apparent — all you have to do is look around — but there is always more to do. The ‘Clean City Alliance’ is not absolving businesses of their legal and moral responsibility; instead, it’s about showing them the positive outcomes that come from doing what's right,” said Caryl Englander, chair of the board, Sanitation Foundation. “New York City belongs to all of us. This shared ownership comes with a shared responsibility to keep our city clean and beautiful.”

 

Purposefully designed to be a replicable model, the “Clean City Alliance” will provide sidewalk cleaning and litter removal services to a given neighborhood for a set period of time, during which the Sanitation Foundation and DSNY will work closely with local stakeholders to ensure the neighborhood continues to remain clean.

 

The launch of the “Clean City Alliance” comes as part of a massive overhaul of cleanliness in New York City, including:

  • The return of full street sweeping and Alternate Side Parking;
  • The highest level of litter basket service in history;
  • Streamlining responsibilities in an effort to ensure long-ignored areas — like medians, step streets, and greenways — are cleaned;
  • A universal curbside composting program — being rolled out over the next year and a half — which will remove rat food from trash bags;
  • The city’s first anti-littering marketing campaign in 15 years; and
  • New enforcement against the scourge of illegal dumping, including $4,000 summonses and vehicle impounds.

New Yorkers who wish to support the work of the “Clean City Alliance” can contribute on the Sanitation Foundation’s website.

 

Excavation Underway For Holiday Inn Express At 4729 Third Avenue In Belmont, The Bronx

 


Excavation is underway at 4279 Third Avenue, the site of a nine-story Holiday Inn Express by InterContinental Hotels in the Belmont section of The Bronx. Designed by Michael Kang Architect and developed by Neelam Chadha, the 172-foot-tall structure will span 43,789 square feet and yield 86 guest rooms. Supreme Builders Corp. is the general contractor and 2918 Arnow Real Estate Group is the owner of the 6,229-square-foot property, which is bound by Third Avenue to the east, Park Avenue to the west, and East 188th Street to the south.

Recent photos show a lone excavator at work on the triangular plot, which formerly housed an open-air parking lot.

No renderings have been released for the project apart from the below elevation diagrams, which show the eastern side facing Third Avenue and the western profile facing Park Avenue. The façade is largely composed of red and black brick framing a grid of windows with PTAC louvers. Limestone panels enclose the first floor, and dark paneling clads the northern corner. A canopy is planned to protrude over the main entrance on Third Avenue.

The ground floor shows a height of 10 feet, while levels two through nine will have ceiling spans of just over nine feet. The building will feature a roof terrace lined with glass railings, and a mechanical bulkhead clad with beige stucco. Signage for the Holiday Inn Express will be placed at the ground floor and on the top level of the eastern wall.

4729 Third Avenue
Third Avenue façade of 4729 Third Avenue. Schematics via Michael Kang Architects
Schematic of Park Avenue elevation, 4729 Third Avenue
Schematic of Park Avenue elevation, 4729 Third Avenue

The black and white diagram below was seen on site and appears to still match the colored schematics from 2016.

Planned guest amenities include laundry facilities, a fitness center, a business center with meeting rooms, a breakfast area, luggage storage, and parking for four bikes.

4729 Third Avenue has an anticipated completion date of fall 2025 posted on the construction board.