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NFR Proposes ‘Two Project’ Solution to Mayor Restaino’s Eminent Domain Quest to Take Land

The ongoing dispute between the City of Niagara Falls and Niagara Falls Redevelopment (NFR) over a 10-acre plot of land may prove pivotal in this year’s mayoral election. Mayor Robert Restaino, up for reelection, has chosen this issue as his primary focus, despite its unpopularity among voters due to the high cost to taxpayers.

NFR, which owns the 10-acre plot known as Parcel 0, plans to partner with Canadian developer Urbacon to build a $1.5 billion high-tech data center called Niagara Digital Campus.

NFR initiated a development concept, and the City Planning Department issued a letter to help implement the data center project in in 2021.

Shortly afterward Mayor Restaino abruptly halted the NFR project, insisting that the city should own the property. He threatened to sue NFR and seize the land through eminent domain if the company refused to donate Parcel 0.

NFR refused to donate the land it planned to develop, and the mayor subsequently announced his own $150 million plan to build an events center and parking ramp on the contested land, to be named Centennial Park.

NFR is now defending its right to develop its property, and an expensive, ongoing eminent domain lawsuit will determine the future of Parcel 0 – either as an events center or a data center.

However, NFR suggests a two-project solution may be possible, providing city residents with both arena, and a park, which the mayor wants, and the state-of-the-art Niagara Digital Campus, which NFR wants to develop.

Here is what NFR has proposed:

For decades, American cities have had a parking problem: too much of it.

Countless residential parking spots go unused, and many downtown garages sit half empty…

Recognizing this, cities are shrinking the number of spaces, freeing up the land for other uses, with far-reaching consequences.

Are Mayor Robert Restaino and the City of Niagara Falls really going to buck the trend and spend tens of millions it doesn’t have to add more parking when an underutilized parking garage next to a city-owned lot already exists?

Here is a map that shows the proposed locations of Urbacon’s Niagara Digital Campus, the land NFR is prepared to donate to the city for a park, and an arena close to Third Street businesses and next to an existing parking garage:

A facility of this size would fit perfectly on the existing city-owned lot on Niagara Street between First and Third Streets. This map shows how it would fit:

And here is a rendering of how the facility would look from Niagara Street:

Note that the arena depicted in this illustration is directly across First Street from the underutilized Rainbow Mall parking lot.

…a free park near the residents who would use it, with $2.5 million over 10 years for upkeep and maintenance…

…an events center near the commercial business on Third Street that would benefit, and

…a $1.48 billion Niagara Digital Campus, with jobs, technology and opportunity that will benefit Niagara Falls residents for generations.

 

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