West Soho Corner Commercial Duplex

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

West Soho Corner Commercial Duplex WEST SOHO CORNER COMMERCIAL DUPLEX CONDOMINIUM For Sale or Lease Located in New Hudson Square Rezoning District NYC’S FASTEST GROWING NEIGHBORHOOD Total of 4,000 sq ft Available Spring/Renwick View from Spring Street Corner Unit with approximately 120 feet of street frontage Great light with huge windows along Spring and Renwick High ceilings (14’ 1st Floor—11’ Lower Level) Existing contemporary high-end creative office build out Two full kitchens, three restrooms Located in soon to be newly rezoned Hudson Square (see page 4) Space is vented. Restaurant use permissible Alan Shmaruk x11 Michael Sherman x16 The Manhattes Group LLC 54 Thompson Street New York, NY 10012 212-334-4666 [email protected] [email protected] www.Manhattes.com Fact Sheet 1E 1W Square Feet First Floor: 1,428 sf 1,161 sf Lower Level: 726 sf 640 sf Taxes: $467 per month $561 per month Common Charges: $1,293 per month $1,447 per month Block & Lot 594/1601 594/1602 Price or Rent: Available upon Request Alan Shmaruk x11 Michael Sherman x16 The Manhattes Group LLC 54 Thompson Street New York, NY 10012 212-334-4666 [email protected] [email protected] www.Manhattes.com 1W First Floor 1W First Floor 1E First Floor 1E Lower Level 1W Lower Level 1W Lower Level 1E Kitchen Alan Shmaruk x11 Michael Sherman x16 The Manhattes Group LLC 54 Thompson Street New York, NY 10012 212-334-4666 [email protected] [email protected] www.Manhattes.com ABOUT HUDSON SQUARE REZONING New Residential Development Allowed New zoning would allow about a quarter of the district to become residential, equivalent to the Flatiron Dis- trict, an extremely vibrant and successful mixed-use neighborhood. The addition of residents will improve street vitality, especially at night and on the weekends, and attract better retailers. Up to 3,500 new apartments are expected to be added to the neighborhood over the next decade. Create a School and Allow Cultural Institutions in Hudson Square Plans to include a 444-seat K-5 school at Duarte Square, which will more than meet the needs of new resi- dents (and upon completion, immediately provide seats for current families) while culturally enriching the district. An Iconic Building at Duarte Square (Intersection of 6th Avenue and Canal Street) Impact: Providing space for a school and needed residential concentration, this one building – at the intersec- tion of three wide streets, Canal, 6th Ave and Varick – would be taller than the district height limit at 430 feet. Plans to Promote Local Retail and Prohibit Big-Box Stores and Nightclubs Developers are working with Hudson Square Business Improvement District, to make the neighborhood more inviting, safer, and greener by creating much-needed open space, retail stores, cafés, bookstores, and other community staples, while significantly restricting big-box stores and nightclubs that cause issues like traffic, noise and parking problems Alan Shmaruk x11 Michael Sherman x16 The Manhattes Group LLC 54 Thompson Street New York, NY 10012 212-334-4666 [email protected] [email protected] www.Manhattes.com Neighborhood map Alan Shmaruk x11 Michael Sherman x16 The Manhattes Group LLC 54 Thompson Street New York, NY 10012 212-334-4666 [email protected] [email protected] www.Manhattes.com .
Recommended publications
  • 1 FULL BOARD MINUTES DATE: September 20, 201 TIME:7:00 P.M
    FULL BOARD MINUTES DATE: September 20, 201 TIME: 7:00 P.M. PLACE: St. Vincent’s Hospital, 170 W. 12th Street Cronin Auditorium, 10th Floor BOARD MEMBERS PRESENT: Ann Arlen, Steve Ashkinazy, Glenn Bristow, Helene Burgess, Keith Crandell, Anthony Dapolito, Noam Dworman, Carol Feinman, Harriet Fields, Edward Gold, Arnold L. Goren, Jo Hamilton, Brad Hoylman, Honi Klein, Lisa LaFrieda, Don Lee, Aubrey Lees, Chair, Community Board #2, Manhattan (CB#2, Man.) Edward Ma, Rosemary McGrath, Don MacPherson, Doris Nash, T. Marc Newell, Judy Paul, Carol Reichman, Robert Rinaolo, Ann Robinson, Rocio Sanz, Ruth Sherlip, John Short, Melissa Sklarz, James Smith, Sean Sweeney, Lora Tenenbaum, Martin Tessler, Betty Williams, Carol Yankay. BOARD MEMBERS EXCUSED: Charle-John Cafiero, Rev. Keith Fennessy, David Reck, Shirley Secunda, Wilbur Weder, Jeanne Wilcke. BOARD MEMBERS ABSENT: Tobi Bergman, Doris Diether, Alan Jay Gerson, Elizabeth Gilmore, Anne Hearn, Debra Sandler, Arthur Z. Schwartz, Verna Small. BOARD STAFF PRESENT: Arthur Strickler, District Manager GUESTS: Daryl Cochrane, Congressman Jerrold Nadler’s office; Scott Melvin, Senator Tom Duane’s office; Meg Reed, Senator Martin Connor’s office; Yvonne Morrow, Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver’s office; Assemblymember Deborah Glick; Tom Castele, Councilmember Kathryn Freed's office; Andree Tenemas, Councilmember Margarita Lopez’ office; Maura Keaney, Counclmember Christne Quinn’s office, Blane Roberts, Man. Borough President’s office; Chris Sade, Augusta Brown, Lee S. Jabvin, Carol Woolmington, Mark Remington, Benjamin Ryan, David Poster, Barbara Baluta, Gary Parker, Emily Fancher, Frank Collerius, David Schaffer, Eliza Bradley, Alan Jacobs, Nancy Deckinger, Yu Quan Lee, Azar Fung, Mary K. Doris, Albert Bennett, James , Elana Posner, E.S.
    [Show full text]
  • City Council Announcement Re: Hudson Sq. Rezoning and South
    THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK OFFICE OF COMMUNICATIONS CITY HALL NEW YORK, NY 10007 (212) 788-7116 **FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE** March 13, 2013 Contact: 212-788-7116 Release # 037-2013 CITY COUNCIL LAND USE COMMITTEE MODIFIES HUDSON SQUARE REZONING PLAN; PRESERVES HISTORIC SOUTH VILLAGE Council agreement provides funds for new roof at Pier 40, 130 more affordable housing units & additional open space for community “The Hudson Square area in Manhattan’s West Side has long been a largely under regulated neighborhood putting it at constant risk of change not supported by the community nor this Council,” said Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn. “Currently, there are no height restrictions in the district which could lead to unwanted skyscrapers. Additionally, the outdated prohibition of residential development has led to little foot traffic on nights or weekends hurting the neighborhood’s small businesses. To this end, the Council’s Subcommittee on Zoning and Franchises and Committee on Land use will vote today to help to preserve much of the neighborhood’s beloved character and commercial foundation while also bringing a desired vitality and more open space to attract new residents and businesses. I want to thank Trinity Real Estate, Community Board 2, all elected officials, and the City Planning Commission for their dedication to ensuring the neighborhood will grow in a way that was in the best interest of the current and future community.” The Council has made several key modifications to the proposal submitted by the applicant, Trinity Real Estate, which include: - More Affordable Housing: Modification of the zoning text to allow developers to maximize affordable housing to the fullest extent allowed.
    [Show full text]
  • Community Board 12, Manhattan Minutes for the Public Safety
    Community Board 12, Manhattan Minutes for the Public Safety Committee Meeting October 4th, 2017 – Conference Room 530 West 166th Street – 6th Floor New York, NY 10032 Committee Members Present (7): Richard Lewis (Chair), Domingo Estevez (Asst. Chair), Rud Morales, Katherine Diaz, Derek Peralta, Natalie Espino, and Mary O’Shaughessy. Board Member (3): Mary Anderson, Elizabeth Lehman, and Ayisha Olgivie. Public (75+): Captain and CO Richard Brea (33rd Precinct), Allan S. Valerio (Manhattan District Attorney Office), P.O. Danny Guzman (34th Precinct – Community Affairs), Lt. Salvatore Marchese (34th Precinct), Dt. Dago Remy Suarez (Aux NYPD 33rd Precinct), Ruth Fasoldt, (Intersection/LinkNYC), Jesse Campoamora (VP Capalino+Company), Etta Graham (Executive Director - Project Renewal), Charles Melham (Project Renewal), Susa Dov (Project Renewal), Lauren Zavier (Project Renewal), Awilda Morton (Project Renewal), Carlton Filln, (Project Renewal), Wesley Hamilton (Parks Dept), , Rev Al Taylor (District Leader), Cynthia Rivelli (Isabella), Carol Ban (Isabella), C. Kerreros, C. Barton, Marcia Nishio, N. Vargas, R. Rodriquez, R. Martinez, Vivian Grice, Venessa Rodriguez, Modito Reyes, Reynaldo Valdez, S.T. Cappel, E.J, Sneed, S. Hecker, B. Hecker, Benjamin Lopez, K. Ross, Anmgiolina Frip, Paulina Mercato, Elvira Castillo, B. Nassau, D. Cardona, K. Lopez, V. Crice, Jan Hawkio, A. Hall, Pedro Acosa, N. Celina, Andeu Singe, Wade de Loe, Sergio Reyes, Raul l. R. Rivera, Carol Bar, M. Colon, Andrew Signer, Rosetta, Wanda Neston, Yvette Suarez, Ana R. C. Maria Arista, Ramon Lopez, Eduardo M., Juan Baldera, George Preston, Michele Harnett, SRO and 11 illegible names on the sign-in sheet. Other Agencies Reps Invited: (3): PO Damieon Frey Transit District 3 (excused); Jordan Nolan (HRA/DHS (excused), FDNY (absent) and PS 128 (absent).
    [Show full text]
  • Current Zoning Proposed Rezoning
    IMPROVING TRINITY CHURCH // A PROGRESSIVE EPISCOPAL CHURCH 2 TRINITY // ACROSS THE WORLD, AND PARTICULARLY IN NEW YORK CITY, TRINITY IS WORKING TO IMPROVE THE LIVES OF PEOPLE IN NEED SOUTH BRONX HARLEM LOWER EAST SIDE BEDFORD STUYVESANT JAMAICA EAST NEW YORK OCEAN HILL - BROWNSVILLE NYC COMMUNITIES WHERE TRINITY FOCUSES ITS SUPPORT FOR EDUCATIONAL AND JOB CREATION PROGRAMS 3 TRINITY // COMMITTED TO PRESERVING AND PROTECTING TWO OF THE CITY’S MOST TREASURED LANDMARKS - TRINITY CHURCH AND ST. PAUL’S CHAPEL 4 TRINITY // TRINITY REAL ESTATE IS TRINITY’S NON-PROFIT REAL ESTATE DIVISION ALL OF THE REVENUE FROM TRINITY’S PROPERTIES GOES TO SUPPORT TRINITY CHURCH AND ITS CHARITABLE MISSION TRINITY PAYS FULL REAL ESTATE TAXES ON ITS HUDSON SQUARE PROPERTIES 5 HUDSON SQUARE // OUR HOME FOR OVER 300 YEARS, TRINITY IS COMMITTED TO A THRIVING CREATIVE NEIGHBORHOOD HUDSON RIVER WEST VILLAGE WEST STREET HUDSON SQUARE TRIBECA CANAL STREET SOHO 6TH AVENUE TRINITY OWNS MORE THAN 40% OF THE PROPERTY IN HUDSON SQUARE (M1-6 DISTRICT) 6 AN EVOLVING NEIGHBORHOOD // FROM CHURCH FARM TO INDUSTRIAL CENTER, HUDSON SQUARE CHANGED AS THE CITY CHANGED 1920 1840 1867 1920 1940’S AS A NEIGHBORHOOD STEWARD, TRINITY THINKS IN TERMS OF DECADES & CENTURIES, NOT QUARTERLY PROFITS 7 AN EVOLVING NEIGHBORHOOD // TODAY HUDSON SQUARE IS HOME TO SOME OF THE CITY’S MOST CREATIVE COMPANIES Barrow St. Carmine St. Bedford St. Macdougal St. Downing St. Seventh Ave. Seventh Morton St. Houston St. HUDSON SQUARE COMPANIES: Leroy St. Clarkson St. Prince St. MEDIA King St. Ave. of the Americas the of Ave. W. Houston St. Charlton St.
    [Show full text]
  • Community Board No. 2, M Anhattan
    Tobi Bergman, Chair Antony Wong, Treasurer Terri Cude, First Vice Chair Keen Berger, Secretary Susan Kent, Second Vice Chair Daniel Miller, Assistant Secretary Bob Gormley, District Manager COMMUNITY BOARD NO. 2, MANHATTAN 3 WASHINGTON SQUARE VILLAGE NEW YORK, NY 10012-1899 www.cb2manhattan.org P: 212-979-2272 F: 212-254-5102 E: [email protected] Greenwich Village Little Italy SoHo NoHo Hudson Square Chinatown Gansevoort Market STATEMENT OF DISTRICT NEEDS Fiscal Year 2019 PREFACE Community Board 2 Manhattan (“CB2”) continues to be greatly concerned that the City has minimized the impact of the district’s rapid changes and has neglected to adequately respond to the need to increase the ancillary services that such changes require. During these years of exponential residential growth in NoHo, SoHo, Chinatown and our Hudson River waterfront, planners have not provided for the necessary amenities that make for a healthy and growing residential community, e.g., public schools, open space and parks, access to health care, adequate public transit opportunities and public transit access, affordable retail space, and general services such as sanitation, police and fire. Each year, CB2 receives many applications for residential conversions and re-zonings. The complaints and requests that come to CB2 reflect the concerns of this new residential population. Our budget priorities for the past few years have continued to focus on servicing these new arrivals to the district, as well as our long-time residents. More specific assessments of services will be set forth throughout this Statement. I. DISTRICT OVERVIEW A. Geography Community Board 2 is a diverse district, bounded on the north by 14th Street, the south by Canal Street, the east by the Bowery/Fourth Avenue, and the west by the Hudson River.
    [Show full text]
  • Socializing Space and Politicizing Financial
    Belgeo Revue belge de géographie 1-2 | 2012 Inaugural issue Socializing space and politicizing financial innovation/destruction: some observations on Occupy Wall Street Socialisation de l’espace et politisation de l’innovation/destruction financière : quelques réflexions sur le mouvement “Occupy Wall Street” Manuel B. Aalbers Electronic version URL: http://journals.openedition.org/belgeo/6155 DOI: 10.4000/belgeo.6155 ISSN: 2294-9135 Publisher: National Committee of Geography of Belgium, Société Royale Belge de Géographie Electronic reference Manuel B. Aalbers, « Socializing space and politicizing financial innovation/destruction: some observations on Occupy Wall Street », Belgeo [Online], 1-2 | 2012, Online since 15 December 2012, connection on 19 April 2019. URL : http://journals.openedition.org/belgeo/6155 ; DOI : 10.4000/ belgeo.6155 This text was automatically generated on 19 April 2019. Belgeo est mis à disposition selon les termes de la licence Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International. Socializing space and politicizing financial innovation/destruction: some obs... 1 Socializing space and politicizing financial innovation/destruction: some observations on Occupy Wall Street Socialisation de l’espace et politisation de l’innovation/destruction financière : quelques réflexions sur le mouvement “Occupy Wall Street” Manuel B. Aalbers Introduction 1 Most protests call for specific changes in specific places. Higher wages, shorter work weeks, equal pay for men and woman, no more separated seating in buses, no more budget cuts, no more bombs, no more discrimination. Usually such demands are specific to a city or country or even to one economic sector within that city or country. In that light, the demands of Occupy Wall Street (OWS) and its offshoots around the globe are not clear.
    [Show full text]
  • Please Contact Liz Ritter at [email protected] to Receive Weekly Updates Via Email
    11/13/13 Dear Neighbor, It’s impossible to list everything in the district, but here are 61 ways to get informed, inspired +/or entertained! Please note in particular Senator Espaillat’s 11/20 forum on “Obamacare” on the Upper West Side, this Sunday’s silver-screen showing of “Casablanca,” important immigration events on the 17th & 21st, the return of UP Theater’s not-to-be-missed production of “Ashé,” how YOU can be a part of the Mayoral transition, and more. Scroll down for information about things happening: Wednesday, Thursday & Friday (14 items) This weekend (9 items), Next week (13 items) Next weekend & Beyond (8 items) How You Can Help (7 items): help your neighbors with your time, your money, your stuff News, information, opportunities & ongoing events (10 items) including congratulations to Word Up on being voted a TONY “Best-of” 2013 as well as housing, employment, cultural & educational opportunities, and special fitness events for 50+. **Note parking prohibitions (179th/181st/B’way/Pinehurst) for movie filming on Saturday 11/16** **Please note the MTA’s FasTrack overnight shutdown of the A/C/B/D lines, November 18th-22nd. Details in final section below.** Check the “How You Can Help” section for information on the Philippines’ Typhoon Haiyan. Feel free to share this e-mail with friends/neighbors. If you know someone who’d like to subscribe, have them e- mail Liz Ritter at [email protected] with their ZIP code. ***WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY & FRIDAY*** (14 items) MWBE Certification Workshop: The NY Women's Chamber of Commerce is giving a FREE business workshop on how to apply for Minority- & Women-owned Business Enterprise Certification so that local businesses in Washington Heights and Inwood can become certified and position themselves to take advantage of upcoming business opportunities in Northern Manhattan with Columbia University and NY NJ Port Authority.
    [Show full text]
  • Occupy-Gazette-3.Pdf
    Sarah Resnick ANN SNITOW Nov. 15 page 7 Greenham Common Courtroom page 20 Geoffrey Wildanger Kathryn Crim page 30 Kathleen Ross page 14 OCCUPY UC DAVIS Bulldozers of the Arrested! page 14 Mind OCCUPY!#3 An OWS-Inspired Gazette Daniel Marcus page 30 Marco Roth Occupation to Mayor Communization Bloomberg’s page 32 SIlvia Federici Language page 2 CHRISTOPHER HERRING AND ZOLTAN GLUCK page 22 Women, Re-Articulating the Struggle for Education Austerity, Marina Sitrin page 30 and the Some unfinished issues with feminist horizon- revolution talism Nicholas Mirzoeff page 32 Eli Schmitt page 18 Mark Greif page 2 COMPLETE TABLE OF CONTENTS Occupy Climate The best Years Open Letter INSIDE THE BACK COVER Change! of our lives ZUCCOTTI RAID & AFTER they were outnumbered, easily, two to “Police—protect—the 1 per-cent.” You a life of qualities? Is quality, by definition one. were standing, twenty of you, defending immeasurable, only describable, some- “What are they so afraid of?” my com- an empty street with bank skyscrapers thing that can be charted by the cleanli- Astra Taylor panion asked when we first arrived at Wall rising out of it. You don’t belong in those ness of a street, the absence of certain Street just after 1 AM, and as I watched skyscrapers. You knew it too. smells, certain people? Is the absence of the eviction this excessive use of force the question dirt, smells, noise, and people what the kept ringing in my ears. But the answer is mayor means by “thriving?” Is there really Last night, in what seems to be part of a obvious: they are afraid of us.
    [Show full text]
  • March 2019 SLA Licensing Resolutions
    Carter Booth, Chair Antony Wong, Treasurer Daniel Miller, First Vice Chair Keen Berger, Secretary Susan Kent, Second Vice Chair Erik Coler, Assistant Secretary Bob Gormley, District Manager COMMUNITY BOARD NO. 2, MANHATTAN 3 W ASHINGTON SQUARE V ILLAGE N EW YORK, NY 10012-1899 www.cb2manhattan.org P: 212-979-2272 F: 212-254-5102 E : [email protected] Greenwich Village v Little Italy v SoHo v NoHo v Hudson Square v Chinatown v Gansevoort Market March 25, 2019 Director Licensing Issuance Division NY State Liquor Authority 317 Lenox Avenue New York, New York 10027 Dear Sir/Madam: At its Full Board meeting on March 21, 2019, Community Board #2, Manhattan (CB2, Man.) adopted the following resolution: 1. Rumba Corp. d/b/a Favela Cubana, 543 LaGuardia Place 10012 (OP – Restaurant with outdoor patio) i. Whereas, the applicant and attorney appeared before Community Board 2, Manhattan’s SLA licensing committee to present an application for a corporate change to on premises liquor license #1213427 pertaining to a Cuban-Brazilian Cuisine Restaurant in a c1-7 zoned 2 story, commercial 1960 building on LaGuardia Place between West 3rd Street and Bleecker Street (block #533 lot #10) in Greenwich Village; and, ii. Whereas, the 2-story premises are approximately 2,500 sq. ft., with 1,500 sq. ft. interior space on the ground floor store level and an additional 1,000 sq. ft. in the basement, and there is an additional 300 sq. ft. patio deck in the front of the ground floor, the proposed occupancy is 70, and applicant presented convincing evidence that the usage is consistent with zoning; and, iii.
    [Show full text]
  • Fiscal Year 2019 Annual Report on Park Maintenance
    Annual Report on Park Maintenance Fiscal Year 2019 City of New York Parks & Recreation Bill de Blasio, Mayor Mitchell J. Silver, FAICP, Commissioner Annual Report on Park Maintenance Fiscal Year 2019 Table of Contents Introduction ............................................................................................................................ 1 Understanding Park Maintenance Needs ............................................................................... 1 How Parks are Maintained ...................................................................................................... 2 About the Data Used in this Report ....................................................................................... 3 Data Caveats .......................................................................................................................... 5 Report Column Definitions and Calculations ........................................................................... 5 Tables ...................................................................................................................................... Table 1 – Park-Level Services ............................................................................................ 8 Table 2 – Sector-Level Services ........................................................................................98 Table 3 – Borough and Citywide Work Orders ...................................................................99 Table 4 – Borough and Citywide-Level Services Not Captured in Work
    [Show full text]
  • Strike Debt and Clobal Ultra Luxury Faction
    YATES MCKEE is a PhD candidate in Art History at CUNY Cradu- ate Center, and has worked with various post-Occupy groups including Strike Debt and Clobal Ultra Luxury Faction. His writing has appeared in October, Grey Room, South Atlantic Quarterly, the Nation and Arf- STRIKE ART forum. He is coeditor of the movement magazine Tidal and the anthology Sensible Politics: The Visual Cultures of Nongovernmental Activism. He lives in New York City. Contemporary Art and the Post-Occupy Condition Yates McKee VERSOV London • New York Chapter 2 The Arts of Occupation: Zuccotti Park, Site-Specificity, and Beyond An occupation is a kind of happening, a performance piece that generates political affects. Hardt and Negri, Declaration We are coming together as bodies in alliance in the street and in the square. As bodies we suffer, we require shelter and food, and as bodies we require one another and desire one another. So this is a politics of the public body, the requirements of the body, its movement and voice. We would not be here if elected officials were representing the popular will. We stand apart from the electoral process and its complicities with exploitation. We sit and stand and move and speak, as we can, as the popular will, the one that electoral democracy has forgotten and abandoned. But we are here, and remain here, enacting the phrase, “We the people.” Judith Butler, address to Zuccotti Park, October 23, 2011, spoken through the People’s Microphone The Arts of Occupation: Zuccotti Park, Site-Specificity, and Beyond 87 86 STRIKE ART took on a new life when its iconic power was turned against itself in Facing up Broadway at the north end of Bowling Green Park in Lower what would become the foundational meme of Occupy Wall Street Manhattan, there stands the monumental bronze sculpture Charging (OWS) released by Adbusters.
    [Show full text]
  • Remedial Investigation Work Plan
    REMEDIAL INVESTIGATION WORK PLAN 92 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10013 NYSDEC BCP Site No. C231130 Prepared For: THE RECTOR, CHURCH-WARDENS, AND VESTRYMEN OF TRINITY CHURCH, IN THE CITY OF NEW-YORK; REMAINDERMAN 92 AOA LLC; 92 HH LLC 76 Trinity Place, 10th Floor New York, NY 10006 Prepared By: Langan Engineering, Environmental, Surveying Landscape Architecture and Geology, D.P.C. 21 Penn Plaza 360 West 31st Street, 8th Floor New York, New York 10001 Michael Burke, PG, CHMM Principal/Vice President June 30, 2020 Langan Project No. 190044801 Remedial Investigation Work Plan June 30, 2020 92 Avenue of the Americas Page i New York, New York Langan Project No. 190044801 TABLE OF CONTENTS CERTIFICATION ............................................................................................................ III 1.0 INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................. 1 2.0 SITE BACKGROUND........................................................................................ 2 2.1 Site Description ..................................................................................... 2 2.2 Surrounding Property Land Use ............................................................. 2 2.3 Site Physical Conditions ......................................................................... 4 2.3.1 Topography ............................................................................................ 4 2.3.2 Geology ................................................................................................
    [Show full text]