New York Post

Holy war on UWS

Landmark church sues amid fight for demolition

- STEVE CUOZZO scuozzo@nypost.com

THE battle over the landmarked, but crumbling, West-Park Presbyteri­an Church at Amsterdam Avenue and West 86th Street has moved onto a second front: Manhattan Supreme Court.

The tiny congregati­on wants to sell the 140-year-old building to developer Alchemy for $33.5 million. As Realty Check previously reported, the church has appealed to the Landmarks Preservati­on Commission to revoke its landmark status on hardship grounds. The LPC is expected to consider the case soon after Labor Day.

Alchemy would raze the church to build a 20-story apartment building that would include a large community center and a new facility for worshipper­s — a move fiercely opposed by local preservati­onists. Some of the activists’ views from their apartments would be blocked by the new building.

Now, the congregati­on is suing The Center at West Park, a nonprofit arts facility that is a tenant at the location, for trying to extend its “null,” “void” and “unenforcea­ble” lease, which expires in December.

‘Hypocritic­al’

The church argues in the suit that the lease, which was signed in 2018, does not give the arts center a unilateral right to renew or extend it. It moreover asserts that the center is in arrears on rent and has failed to raise funds to restore the ruined building as it pledged to do — which was a key condition for giving it the far-belowmarke­t lease.

The church says it would take at least $50 million to repair the church, which has been surrounded by scaffolds for 20 years and has been closed by the Department of Buildings several times.

A church source called the arts center’s move “hypocritic­al. The center was set up to help save the church [by raising restoratio­n funds]. Having failed, they’re now trying to stop the church from doing what is needed.

“The building is literally falling apart,” the insider said.

A lease extension, if the court ruled in favor of the arts center, wouldn’t likely thwart the sale, although it could affect the timing of demolition.

The center, backed by City Councilmem­ber Gale Brewer and several local activists, has not yet responded in court.

But the organizati­on’s lawyer, Michael S. Hiller, said the lease “expressly grants the center the unilateral right to extend the lease terms for five years.”

He said the “bogus allegation­s” in the lawsuit are a “subterfuge by the congregati­on to avoid the promises and representa­tions it made and to reap an economic windfall” by selling. Brewer said, “Time and again, city landmarks are threatened ... [by] developers whose appetite for economic gain seems insatiable.”

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 ?? ?? The congregati­on of West-Park Presbyteri­an Church wants to sell the landmarked building, which one insider says is “falling apart,” for $33.5 million. It is suing its tenant, The Center at West Park, for trying to extend its lease.
The congregati­on of West-Park Presbyteri­an Church wants to sell the landmarked building, which one insider says is “falling apart,” for $33.5 million. It is suing its tenant, The Center at West Park, for trying to extend its lease.
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