


Mayor Eric Adams stunningly reversed course on plans to turn an abandoned luxury Harlem apartment complex into a migrant shelter when he was met with community outrage Thursday night.
Adams’ change of heart came during a surprise appearance at a St. Nicholas House Resident Association meeting packed with dozens of residents furious over the city’s plan for a building development on Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd once marketed as an upscale condominium complex.
The 35-story complex was quietly slated to become a homeless shelter that could potentially house migrants — a plan that was only revealed to the community when some neighborhood residents saw workers bringing bed frames and mattresses into the building.
But in the face of pressure, Adams on Thursday night backpedaled.
“I told the team, ‘Find out what’s going on here. We’re not moving folks into a brand new building when you have long-term needs in a community. That’s not gonna happen,'” Adams said at the meeting, according to CBS New York.
“You will not have migrants and asylum seekers in that property,” Adams declared.
The complex will instead be used to house long-term New York families experiencing homelessness, a spokesperson for the city Department of Social Services told the outlet in a statement.
The building, originally billed as a lux living space where residents would pay market rates to enjoy an indoor swimming pool and apartments with marble bathrooms, has sat vacant for a decade since developers were forced into foreclosure.
The site was then leased to a non-profit that had been working with the city Department of Social Services/Homeless Services to use it as a shelter for either migrants or the Big Apple’s native homeless population.
Those in attendance at Thursday’s community meeting let Adams know how they felt about the initial plans to house migrants.
“You are the mayor. We do not want to hear excuses,” one Harlem resident shouted at Adams, CBS reported.
Others expressed hope the complex could be turned into affordable housing for neighbors who are struggling to afford their rent.
“We have a dearth of affordable housing we’re being priced out of the community … The lack of respect is absolutely appalling,” Harlem resident Regina Smith said.
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“These apartments could be used for us to go into,” Leslie Johnson said.
The city Department of Social Services confirmed to CBS New York the building would be transformed into transitional housing for long-term New York families.
“Despite the developer’s initial plans for market rate condominiums, development had been stalled and this building left indefinitely empty– it would not have advanced as luxury housing. Instead of sitting vacant, this site will serve as high-quality transitional housing for long-term New York City families with children experiencing homelessness,” a spokesperson said.
“We will be working with an experienced not-for-profit provider to help these families stabilize their lives and ultimately move into permanent housing. As we have always done, we will continue to maintain open lines of communication and work closely with the community every step of the way to ensure that we are collaboratively working to provide critical services for our neighbors in need.”
A timeline for the housing has not yet been established.