By Kara I. Schechter Rakowski and Alexa Englander | August 15, 2017
Kara I. Schechter Rakowski and Alexa Englander write: The development of multiple dwellings in Special Anti-Harassment zoning districts located in Manhattan has historically come along with its own special kind of red tape. In the last few decades, restrictions on demolition and material alterations have made it very difficult for development in certain special districts. Within the last two years, however, the NYC Department of Housing Preservation and Development has started to enforce a previously overlooked provision of the Zoning Resolution which has presented even more obstacles for developers to navigate in order to develop sites in the Special Hudson Yards, Clinton, West Chelsea and Garment Center districts in Manhattan.
By njlawjournal | New Jersey Law Journal | August 10, 2017
Trial Court Required to Consider Allegations that Defendants' Underlying Litigation Was Sham Brought to Injure Market Rivals
By Lloyd Dunkelberger | August 9, 2017
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, a key player in Florida's decades-old legal fight with Georgia over water flow in the Apalachicola River, has weighed into the pending case before the U.S. Supreme Court.
By Charles Toutant | August 9, 2017
Two months after Bernards Township agreed to a $3.25 million settlement of litigation over its denial of a mosque application, the settlement has been challenged in two suits by a conservative religious group.
By Charles Toutant | August 4, 2017
An application to build two high-rise buildings on the Hoboken waterfront is entitled to automatic approval after the city planning board refused to hold hearings on the plan, a New Jersey appeals court has ruled.
By thelegalintelligencer | The Legal Intelligencer | August 4, 2017
Procedural validity challenge to zoning ordinance upheld where municipality failed to strictly comply with statutory public notice requirements, even though challenging landowner had actual notice of proposed ordinance. Order of the trial court affirmed.
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | August 3, 2017
City's R-2A Zoning Ordinance Not Facially Discriminatory in Violation of FHA, ADA
By thelegalintelligencer | The Legal Intelligencer | August 3, 2017
In 2010, plaintiff Nancy Brown, a veterinarian, had a portion of her land, in Plymouth Meeting, taken by the state.
By Carla Vianna | August 1, 2017
The Christ Fellowship Baptist Church gets a 300-space parking garage out of the deal arranged by Greenberg Traurig lawyers.
By Lewis Goldshore | July 31, 2017
A look at two significant environmental law cases, decided in the last term of the N.J. Supreme Court, and three cases of interest on the court's docket for the 2017-2018 term.
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