This image of the skyline surrounding central park as you look south really struck me because of the nickname given to all of the new construction going on in this area right now. “Billionaires Row” as it has become known is an area of rapidly developing sky scraping towers, most of which are zoned as residential or mixed use space. The prospect of adding this many new and very expensive housing units to the city’s already expensive real estate market has far reaching consequences not just for consumers of New York City’s real estate, but also on the infrastructure and resources needed to manage the ever increasing number of people these units will attract. As this growth alters New York’s social, financial, and physical terrain, it can strain our infrastructure with changing energy demands. In weighing the pluses and minuses of this change, we must consider the environmental impacts of this growth, and how sustainable it can be.
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Hello Ingrid,
I too have always been fascinated by New York’s ever-expanding Billionaire Row and how it affects the city. While I do agree that wealthier people moving to the city will put a strain on our infrastructure, I think it’s important to recognize how this type of strain may be different than the strain we’d experience from something like Amazon opening its second headquarters in New York. The introduction of a few hundred super wealthy people might pressure the city to make existing transportation infrastructure nicer or more appealing to an upperclass whereas if Amazon brought 25,000 jobs to the city it might pressure the mta to increase the number of cars running on the track.