Monday, May 28, 2007

Sitting helpless as damage continues

 
Monday, May 28, 2007, 4:00 AM
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Work next-door has heavily damaged his property, Anthony Ciccone says.Work next-door has heavily damaged his property, Anthony Ciccone says.
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Anthony Ciccone's Ganmar Electronics has been at 224 16th St. in south Park Slope, Brooklyn, since 1972. With a condo going up next-door, his building shows cracks in the brickwork and stains from flooding in his basement.
"It was like a faucet coming through the wall," he said. "There was half a foot of water on the floor. I had to move all my equipment out."
Ciccone has sued the new condo's developer for $1 million, claiming sloppy work on that foundation "weakened and undermined" his property and allowed water to leak in.
Louis Tufino, who owns a house at 232 16th St., said his basement has "an inch gap in the floor and a big hole in the backyard where it's sunk." He also blames work at 226 16th St.
Back on Feb. 15, 2006, two construction workers at that address were rushed to New York Methodist Hospital when a 10-foot wall collapsed on them during demolition.
Last year, the city Buildings Department cited the developer, 16th St. Development Corp. LLC, for failure to comply with a stop-work order and for working without a permit. Twice, it issued violations for failure to safeguard public and property.
Department records also show $10,000 in unpaid fines at the site.
The agency concluded that the demolition work was being done in "an unsafe manner" by MMG Designs, a Staten Island-based company that has a record of violations in the neighborhood.
For example, at 166 16th St., MMG employee Alfonso Cruz fell from the roof and was injured. His employer was cited for "failure to carry out demolition in a safe and proper manner." The violation noted that there was "no fall restraint system."
The company also was cited for illegal demolition at 182 15th St., a condo that was cut to half its planned size after a massive neighborhood campaign.
MMG owner Maria Grasso did not return a call for comment.
 
Daily News Reporter Brian Kates has written extensively on Brooklyn's construction boondoggle.

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