City Council OKs NYU Growth in Greenwich Village

Many residents and NYU faculty members have opposed the addition of four new buildings near Washington Square Park

The City Council gave final approval Wednesday to a plan to expand New York University's footprint in Greenwich Village — a move critics warn could change the character of a beloved neighborhood that has nurtured artistic and social movements throughout the decades.

Dozens of protesters were escorted out of the council's chambers before the vote on the plan, which calls for four new buildings in the area around Washington Square Park. Following objections from neighborhood residents and NYU faculty members, the proposal was reduced this month to 1.9 million square feet of new classroom space and other facilities for the more than 50,000 students at the nation's largest private university.

Andrew Berman, executive director of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation, said the construction threatens to destroy what makes the area, which includes Washington Square Park, so special.

"The character of the neighborhood will shift from a diverse neighborhood where a variety of different kinds of people come together, to the equivalent of a company town, where a single institution controls and defines the neighborhood," he said.

But Councilwoman Margaret Chin, who represents the area, argued the reduced plan cuts the amount of planned above-ground construction by one-quarter, ensuring "that NYU's growth will occur at a sustainable pace well into the future."

"It is important for New York City and the Village that NYU has the capacity to meet its growing academic needs," she said. Supporters have argued that the school's ability to attract top students boosts the city's economy because many stay in the area after graduating.

It has been decades since many artists pursuing a bohemian lifestyle could afford to live in Greenwich Village, but the history of the neighborhood and its low-lying buildings and tree-lined streets continue to attract New Yorkers and tourists.

The area sports row houses and carriage houses dating from the 1820s to the 1850s. In the early 1920s and 1930s, the Greenwich Village Follies gave Martha Graham and Cole Porter their start. Among the artists who eventually lived or worked there were Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, Allen Ginsburg, Andy Warhol and Keith Haring.

It is also the site of the 1969 riots at the Stonewall Inn that helped spark the gay rights movement, a yearly outlandish Halloween Parade, the now-closed punk-rock club CBGB and the Village Vanguard jazz club, where Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk and other jazz greats performed.

On Wednesday, author and NYU professor E.L. Doctorow published an opinion piece in the Daily News that accused the university of "colonizing" the neighborhood.

"I find it hard to believe that city officials have convinced themselves that no harm and only benefit would come of this monumentalizing of the university from the ashes of the historical homes and shops and gardens and definitive neighborhood streets all the world knows as Greenwich Village," he wrote.

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Associated Press writer Ula Ilnytzky contributed to this report.

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