The Bergen Record

Storage facility proposed for lot next to City Green Farm in Clifton

- Matt Fagan

CLIFTON — A proposal in front of the city’s zoning board to build a 125,000-square-foot storage facility on a 2.6-acre lot off Route 46 east was met with lots of opposition.

Going before the board because it does not meet the lot’s residentia­l zoning requiremen­ts, the proposal by applicant Geeland LLC calls for a four-story complex with about 31,000 square feet of storage space on each floor. The zone allows buildings with a maximum height of 30 feet.

Other variances sought for the project include a reduction in parking spaces from 67 to 14, because, the applicant said, the use will be low-intensity and only two employees are expected to be at the site. The applicatio­n also calls for two loading spaces rather than the 13 required.

The applicatio­n on Wednesday saw significant opposition, in part because of the area’s flooding issues and the site’s location, adjacent to the City Green Farm Eco-Center, the city-owned farmland.

Resident Ann Schnakenbe­rg and City Green Executive Director Jennifer Papa said they take issue with the proposal. Schnakenbe­rg and other residents said they are concerned about how water runoff would affect flooding in the region.

Torrential rainstorms in recent years have led to significant flooding along the Weasel Brook and Third River. The concern is that additional developmen­t would exacerbate stormwater runoff.

Although the engineer for the project, Marc Walker, said the applicant plans to install a water detention system that exceeds requiremen­ts, residents were not convinced. The planned removal of trees on the lot also caused concern.

The project, as proposed, calls for tearing down the existing one-story building on the property, which fronts on Route 46, as well as cutting down the trees that blanket the property.

“This is a wooded lot in what is supposed to be a residentia­l zone,” Schnakenbe­rg said, adding that “192 trees are slated for removal next to an important and flood-prone intersecti­on where the Morris Canal once flowed.”

Walker, in his testimony, said the detention facility would handle runoff up to a 100-year storm, slowly releasing water into the stormwater system.

Papa said the proximity of the project to the farming areas is a problem. City Green’s vegetable growing area is right up against the property line.

City Green members also expressed concern that lights from the storage facility would affect its apiaries.

After reviewing the applicant’s environmen­tal impact statement, the city’s Environmen­tal Commission said the project should be rejected.

“There is no mention of the impact to surroundin­g properties, i.e. the farm in particular, when it comes to surface runoff,” commission Chairman Stephen Shukaitis said. “I recommend that the applicatio­n be denied.”

The applicant agreed to make some amendments to its plan, including more stringent stormwater runoff standards. The public hearing is scheduled to continue on April 3.

 ?? TARIQ ZEHAWI/NORTHJERSE­Y.COM ?? Shoppers at the annual plant sale at City Green in Clifton on May 11. City Green is a nonprofit organizati­on on a 5-acre farm that provides fresh vegetables to food deserts, an educationa­l center and more.
TARIQ ZEHAWI/NORTHJERSE­Y.COM Shoppers at the annual plant sale at City Green in Clifton on May 11. City Green is a nonprofit organizati­on on a 5-acre farm that provides fresh vegetables to food deserts, an educationa­l center and more.

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