
PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
17, No. 15 |
July
15- 28, 2004 |



Game Over (Finally)
Fordham Arcade Razed
By MIRANDA KAPLAN
No resident of North Fordham
can help noticing that the Fordham Arcade, a persistent eyesore wedged
between Webster and Decatur avenues, has been demolished after decades of
abandonment.
In March, the Norwood News reported that the Bronx Council for
Economic Development (BCED) and other neighborhood groups contacted Samuel
Falack, the property's owner since last August, about redeveloping the site.
In a letter, Fordham community members and business owners expressed concern
about the garbage piling up outside the fence and the rats that had found a
home in the vacant building. Falack assured the BCED that he had plans for
the site, but claimed to be held up by inadequate funds.
According to Wilma Alonso of the BCED, it now appears that problem is
resolved. A branch of Cookie's, a Brooklyn-based children's retailer of
which Falack is an owner, will open where the arcade once stood.
Joe Muriana, associate vice president of government relations and urban
affairs at Fordham University, was one of many community members concerned
about inaction at the site. "It's great that he's demolishing the
building, it's been sort of an eyesore and a scourge," he said.
"We welcome the development."
At press time, Muriana knew no details of the plan, such as when
construction would be completed or when the store would open. Falack did not
return a call from the Norwood News requesting comment.
Muriana noted that the demolition will not eliminate the vermin. But he is
satisfied that the arcade has been razed, which, he says, "was really
more of a major concern for people than what came afterwards."
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