The Town of
Poughkeepsie has stumbled through the process of getting
its land-use regulations updated, but under new Supervisor
Patricia Myers, it is making headway.
While officials want to steer more growth into town centers
and better protect some of the outlying areas, they have
to realize needless delays could take their toll on good
development ventures that have been in the planning stages
for years.
Nowhere is that more true than at the old Hudson River Psychiatric
Center grounds off Route 9. There, developers want to convert
the main campus of the former center into hundreds of housing
units, a small hotel and a business center. The site includes
a Victorian-era administration building that has been vacant
for decades, as well as dozens of other structures. It took
about seven years for the developers — Hudson Heritage
CPCR Ventures — to get through the bureaucratic maze
before they were able to buy the buildings and about 156
acres from the state. The new owners paid $2.75 million
and expect to spend from $150 million to $200 million to
renovate the buildings and groom the grounds.
Last year, the town imposed a building moratorium on certain
residential projects and recently extended the ban until
June. But it is at least allowing developers to proceed
with rezoning applications, which should be helpful to Hudson
Heritage.
Historic designation desired
Hudson Heritage wants the town to create a historic revitalization
designation for the property. Essentially, this will give
the developers a little more flexibility, since most of
the property is zoned residential. While the new owners
hope to convert part of the old administration building
into hundreds of townhouses, their long-term plans include
a number of shops, office space and more in other buildings
on the sprawling grounds.
Keep in mind these buildings have been vacant for decades
in some cases, with the state now operating a smaller psychiatric
center off Route 9G. Some of the old buildings may have
solid foundations but have deteriorated inside, in part,
because the heat was shut off a long time ago. Renovations
to these buildings can't begin soon enough.
The town chose to adopt the building moratorium after earlier
drafts of the master plan were deemed incomplete and vague
in places. The new draft is better and clearly targets some
development for the town's existing centers, such as Fairview
and Arlington. But the town still needs to update the corresponding
zoning laws that essentially will police the master plan.
The town needs to end this moratorium as quickly as possible.
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