Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Fri Jun 29, 2018, 09:01 AM Jun 2018

The Lost City of Trump

It was supposed to be his legacy. Today it’s a mere shadow of his dream—but he declared victory anyway. How the saga of Trump City foreshadowed the president’s chaotic path to the White House.

By MICHAEL KRUSE July/August 2018

The week before Thanksgiving in 1985, a 39-year-old Donald Trump announced his plan to make sure nobody would ever forget him.

At a showy news conference at his sleek, glass-wrapped Grand Hyatt in midtown Manhattan, and later that evening at a cramped, tense community meeting in the cafeteria of the John Jay College of Criminal Justice on the Upper West Side, Trump unveiled drawings and models of his vision for the old Penn Central rail yards on the bank of the Hudson River. It wasn’t just the largest undeveloped tract of land in Manhattan; it was “the greatest piece of land in urban America,” he crowed. And on those 76 acres, he intended to build nearly 8,000 apartments and condominiums for up to 20,000 people, almost 10,000 parking spots, some 3.6 million square feet of television and movie studio space, and some 2 million square feet of “prestigious” stores. There would be no fewer than six 76-story towers, and looming atop it all one unprecedented skyscraper twice that height. It was a behemoth endeavor meant to go, his promotional materials proclaimed, “beyond the grandeur and excellence that has become synonymous with projects bearing the Trump name.”

This was supposed to be his legacy. Not Trump Tower. Not a clutch of casinos. Certainly not a political office of any kind.

In a metropolis of superlatives, he was striving to be New York’s biggest builder, a cocksure maker of tangible, unmissable things—and here, now, he wanted to build a city within the city, a conspicuously separate entity, of a style and scale no one had accomplished, not even the man who had shaped modern New York, Robert Moses. It was, in the words of the New York Times, his “bid for immortality.” First, he called it Television City; then, simply and unsurprisingly, Trump City. That centerpiece skyscraper would be the world’s tallest building, and he was going to live at the top.

And he failed.

Confronted over the span of two decades with a complicated thicket of social and governmental interests, frustrated by the incremental realities of bureaucracy and stymied by a disciplined, well-funded and committed opposition, Trump raged and feuded with nonpliant politicians and intractable citizens and critics from an established intellectual elite. In the end, nothing even approaching his grandest ambition was ever built. No other chapter in Trump’s long life reveals more about the man who now inhabits the Oval Office. “It’s all a wonderful sort of mosaic,” says Jim Capalino, one of New York’s most prominent lobbyists, who worked for Trump at the time, “of all of the characteristics and all of the personality traits and bluster and bravado and insecurity that are … shaping his presidency.”

more
https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2018/06/29/trump-robert-moses-new-york-television-city-urban-development-1980s-218836

1 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
The Lost City of Trump (Original Post) DonViejo Jun 2018 OP
I remember this... TreasonousBastard Jun 2018 #1

TreasonousBastard

(43,049 posts)
1. I remember this...
Fri Jun 29, 2018, 09:38 AM
Jun 2018

Aside from his grandiose dreams, the key was to get NBC to move out of Rockefeller Center and he was in competition with Hartz Mountain (which by that time had expanded from canary food to real estate) who offered them a prime NJ location.

Hartz understood that NBC was just using them for leverage in lease negotiations and had their own reasons for getting involved, very likely the publicity. Trump never got that and genuinely thought he had a shot. He didn't. The Rock knew exactly what was going on and made it difficult to impossible for them to move to a place they didn't really want to move to.

Trump could have learned something about dealmaking from that, but he railed and whined about how stupid NBC was for not helping make his dream come true.

NY didn't hate huge projects-- Starrett City, Lefrak City and others were built without the problems Trump had, but the rail yard was a special problem. The stress on the A Train and West Side highway, the need for a new sewer plant, and other serious problems were not the kind of thing Trump was good at dealing with.

Latest Discussions»General Discussion»The Lost City of Trump