New York Post

FULTON’S SHOPS & ROBBERS

Operator seeks split with MTA

- By GEORGETT ROBERTS, NOLAN HICKS and STEVE JANOSKI groberts@nypost.com

The retail giant that runs the Fulton Transit Center in lower Manhattan wants out of its deal with the MTA — blaming crime for scaring tenants away from the shopping space.

Westfield Fulton Center claims the subway hub has been overrun by homeless people, street hustlers and vandalism because of a lack of adequate security, according to court papers — as one shop manager told The Post even a tip jar was stolen multiple times.

Assaults and employee intimidati­on have become more and more common at the glass-andsteel building on the corner of Fulton Street and Broadway, which the MTA initially pitched as comparable in stature to Rockefelle­r Center or Grand Central Terminal, the company claimed.

“Few businesses want to open and operate a store where their employees and customers regularly would experience theft, property damage, bodily harm or threats thereof,” the company said in a March 8 response to an MTA lawsuit demanding the company stay on as managers.

“As the safety and security of Fulton Transit Center continued to degrade, it became nearly impossible to attract ‘high quality’ subtenants, existing ones declined to renew their leases and some surrendere­d their leases early, and the remaining existing subtenants have begged Westfield for help,” it continued.

“Many of the subtenants confirmed that Fulton Transit Center’s security issues were the sole reason they left the space.”

Plus, it claims the MTA is still on the hook for a $13.2 million award granted to Westfield by an arbitrator in 2022 to compensate the company for shoddy and unfinished constructi­on work at the subway hub.

An MTA spokespers­on declined to comment on the litigation but said in a statement that “we have full confidence in the NYPD, which has surged officers into the subway, to ensure safety across the transit system, including at Fulton Center.”

But in its lawsuit — filed last month in Manhattan federal court — the MTA said it would “face irreparabl­e injury” if Westfield abandoned the building, which opened in 2014.

20-year lease

The 20-year lease — signed in May of that year — requires Westfield to manage and operate the Fulton Center, the lawsuit said. And it’s not allowed to back out over crime concerns.

The agency asked the court to force Westfield to stay — and if it leaves anyway, declare it in breach of the agreement. Westfield is a subsidiary of mammoth Paris-based commercial real-estate company Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield.

The gleaming, $1.4 billion transit hub a few blocks south of City Hall was a centerpiec­e of the Big Apple’s plan to revitalize the area in the wake of 9/11, which wiped out a significan­t amount of public-transit infrastruc­ture, the lawsuit said. The center — which connects five undergroun­d stations and a web of nine subway lines — sees up to 300,000 straphange­rs pass through each day, according to the MTA.

But as the city continues to struggle with a series of troubling crimes in its transit system, Westfield claims the MTA hasn’t kept up its end of the security bargain.

Some tenants agreed, telling The Post that the place desperatel­y needs more guards.

“It’s difficult — there’s only one security officer on duty,” the manager of Gong Cha, a bubbletea shop, told The Post on Tuesday. “We should have more security. One definitely is not enough. We should have two or three.”

The manager — who did not want to be identified — said the business’ tip jar was stolen three times in six months. And the now-shuttered Haagen-Dazs next door had been robbed “every several weeks.”

“It used to happen a lot,” the manager said. “They couldn’t make any money.”

Subway crime soared 20% in the first two months of 2024 compared with the same time last year, according to city data.

That increase was mostly driven by big jumps in grand larcenies, felony assaults and robberies, NYPD statistics showed.

Gov. Hochul addressed the soaring transit anxiety by recently deploying 750 National Guard troops and 250 New York State Police and MTA officers, meant to help the Big Apple “solve this crisis.”

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