New York Post

$2M boondog gle

Rockaway canine park breaks bank

- By RICH CALDER

This project has gone to the dogs.

A beachfront dog run under constructi­on in the Rockaways is in line to cost taxpayers a doggone fortune — and at nearly $2 million it might be the most expensive taxpayer-funded project of its kind in New York City history.

“It’s wonderful that a new dog run is being built, but spending this amount of money is outrageous,” said Geoffrey Croft, a longtime city parks watchdog, referring to the $1.83 million project slated for Shore Front Parkway near Beach 90th Street in Queens.

The 10,500-square-foot pooch playground is being built atop a previously undevelope­d section of the Rockaways beachfront and will provide separate areas accommodat­ing both large-sized and smaller breeds.

The city Parks Department project won’t include gold-plated fire hydrants or water bowls, but it will offer amenities fit for a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel — including shaded bench areas, a dozen pieces of “agility” equipment, a drinking fountain and solar-powered USB charging stations, officials said.

Typically, Parks Department dog-run projects over the past few years have cost about $700,000 to $1 million, city officials said.

The agency’s most recent canine constructi­on includes a 4,100square-foot dog run at Devoe Park in the Bronx last November that cost $796,000.

Earlier this month, Parks hired Queens-based St. John’s Enterprise­s — the same contractor building the dog run in the Rockaways — for $579,786 to put up a 4,800-square-foot pooch play area at St. James Park in the Bronx.

The Parks Department would not immediatel­y confirm whether the Rockaways dog run is the most expensive in the agency’s history.

Instead, officials insisted it’s an unfair comparison because costs include building out a 34,000square-foot section by the boardwalk — which will include the future pooch paradise — to provide new sidewalks, water service and other features.

The Shore Front Parkway Dog Run project has been in the works since 2018, but constructi­on was pushed back until last September due to the pandemic and other factors. The Parks Department expects it to be completed by the end of this summer.

Councilwom­an Joann Ariola, a Queens Republican whose district will include the new dog run, called the project the latest example of the Big Apple paying more for capital constructi­on than what most other cities pay.

“This is not a good use of taxpayer dollars,” said Ariola. “We need more oversight on capital constructi­on.”

She said legislatio­n introduced Thursday by Council Minority Leader Joe Borelli (R-Staten Island) requiring city agencies to be more transparen­t about how they’re spending taxpayer dollars on constructi­on projects must be approved — especially a bill she’s co-sponsoring with him that would create a 15-person task force to reform the city’s capital constructi­on system.

A Parks spokesman called the dog run “a massive new amenity for the peninsula.”

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 ?? ?? GRRR! The city is spending some $2 million on a Rockaway beachfront pup-frolicking space (top), but just $800,000 for a Bronx dog run (above).
GRRR! The city is spending some $2 million on a Rockaway beachfront pup-frolicking space (top), but just $800,000 for a Bronx dog run (above).

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