A Community Takes Charge

Advisory as sent to us by a BRO reader:
Endangered Residents Organize to Save Historic Building After Brick Wall Collapse Demonstration planned to protest against demolition of landmark livery stable:
Citizens for Stable Neighborhoods, an ad-hoc group launched to save Richard Waite’s 1889 White Bros. Livery Stable at 428 Jersey Street in Buffalo and control problem landlords, is staging a protest against the emergency demolition of the stable.
When: 4:00 PM, Friday, June 13, 2008
Where: Corner Jersey Street & Richmond Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14213
Citizens For Stable Neighborhoods is concerned about an emergency demolition process which occurs at public expense with no guaranteed reimbursement by negligent property owners. The long-time owner of the stable, Robert Freudenheim, has not sufficiently maintained the property or others he has owned, including a building on Wadsworth St. in the Allentown Historic District which suffered collapse and had to be demolished.
“The City of Buffalo promised to address the neighborhood’s concerns about the building’s deteriorating condition and the owner’s apparent neglect in a meeting with his department heads last month (May),” said Kitty Herrick, coalition spokeswoman. “Now our fears have come to pass. Demolition of such a large structure will cause serious harmful consequences to the urban fabric of the surrounding neighborhood.”
The group would like to save all or as much of the huge stable as possible because of its architectural and urban design merit, and the fact it forms a safe, quiet urban oasis that is the foundation of neighborhood life and attractiveness in what has come to be known as the Cottage District.
The group demands that the demolition process be stopped, and time given to explore other options to mitigate the hazard caused by landlord neglect, and that Robert Freudenheim be held accountable for his negligence to the fullest extent of the law.
“What we are seeking from the City of Buffalo is their assistance to stabilize the building and allow the displaced residents to return to their homes, allowing the neighborhood to explore saving as much of the structure as possible,” said Tim Conroy, who’s backyard at 64 Richmond contains debris from the collapse. Residents evacuated from their homes by the collapse will be available for questions.
In addition, some neighborhood residents made a web page to voice their concerns and rally support.
Will the efforts of these groups come to fruition, or will we be doing another architectural postmortem next week?

As we mentioned in our previous post, we’re in the process of changing the Buffalo Rising site. We’re almost there as we expect to launch the new site on Friday, December 19th.
In the meantime, posting will be light as we log new stories in the new publishing system which will only be viewable when we launch on Friday.
As always, we appreciate our users’ patience as we make this transition but we promise it will be well worth it. With faster load times, a comment view …
Caroline Kennedy was in town for a visit with our mayor yesterday. A possible choice to succeed US Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, Kennedy's name has been mentioned along with that of Attorney General Andrew Cuomo (son of former New York Governor Mario Cuomo) and our own Byron Brown, among others.
Certainly, Kennedy has "been around politics" all of her life, which is to say she was born into a family of politicos and lived in the White House--neither of which would necessarily f …
Free light rail rides on downtown's above ground section could be derailed thanks to the Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority's budget mess. That is the news coming out of a Buffalo Place meeting this morning. Facing a budget shortfall and reduced State operating assistance, the NFTA is scrambling for new revenue sources and is contemplating charging for rides along the lengthy downtown pedestrian mall.
Well it is Christmas time in the city and the NFTA helped put people and especially children into the mood in a very festive and fun way. One of my favorite memories of childhood was taking the train downtown with my grandfather. I would gaze out the windows and watch the tunnel speed by. It always felt like we were going a million miles an hour.
Then there was the ability to stand up and walk around during the ride without the need to be strapped down. It was always a fun time … 




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buffaloboy14
I hope it poors out during this tree hugging meet and greet
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platt4
Poor spelling there BB14. Now go get your homework done.
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jt1983
bb14, these people are hardly "tree-huggers." this is their neighborhood and they deserve a say in what happens in their backyards. they obviously love this building and don't want to see it go. the decay of it is something that was out of their hands.
oh, and the correct spelling is "pours."
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mbhxam
well, if they love it so much, how about they form an LLC, pool money together and buy/rehab the place? as i've said before, talk is oh so cheap.
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NBJOHN
BB14 = me speak English good
magnificent building from old Buffalo... Hoping something can be done to save it
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MJWorthington
well according to Buffaloboy14, if we knock it down a magical glass tower will appear on this site (unlike all our other shovel ready sites) and we will be like all other northeastern cities and have zero decay.......;)
I suppose those who fought for the Webb building to stand after its floors were collapsed also made the wrong choice too? I mean we could have 100 shovel ready sites downtown instead of 99......what were they thinking?
Its obvious knocking stuff down with no other plans to build anything there had done wonders for us.
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sb16
What does the neighborhood want it to be even if rehabbed?
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STEEL
You mean we could have had a shinny new glass tower were the web is? And instead we have to settle for a beautifully restored historic building full of upscale tenants?
Well anyway, a shinny new tower should appear any day now on the two parking lots next to Web,
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tommyBluez
GOOD LUCK!!! I'D BE THERE IF I COULD!!! I'M AT WORK UNTIL 8 :(
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tommyBluez
GOOD LUCK!!! I'D BE THERE IF I COULD!!! I'M AT WORK UNTIL 8 :(
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Olcott_Beach
This is actually a fabulous building and I had no idea that it had been design by Richard Waite who lived in the Kleinhains area, but I won’t bore you with history.
White’s Livery Stable is huge and the demolition would be a sad state of affairs and would create a gapping hole for the residents who own the brick cottages behind the stable.
It is sad that owners do not maintain their properties ~ I wonder why Robert Freudenheim would buy such a building only to set on it.
So much potential but so little funds available?
Good luck to the residents.
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tmarks
mbhxam & buffaloboy
Let me ask you a question?
Are you a resident of this city?
If answered "yes", why are you not angry about this? I mean, this owner's and city hall's (in)actions, are now resulting in every taxpayer in this city paying for a $300,000 demolition. Not to mention a devastating blow to one of the few intact 115+ year old neighborhoods.
Now, if this owner had conformed with building inspection laws, and the city had enforced them, we would not be facing this tragedy. This needs to change, we cannot continue to let buildings die that can never be replaced. City building codes need to be enforced, and owners held accountable.
This was 100% preventable and sickens me that we will probably lose this amazing building, and city hall nor the building owner will be held accountable.
Bullshit. Buffalo needs to hold it's government to a higher standard.
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davvid
We should not be taking BuffaloBoy14 seriously.
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comptart_lws
Wasn't it not so long ago that the Mayor walked several west side neighborhoods with the Councilman, specifically looking for housing and quality of life issues? In fact, has anyone met with Councilman Rivera about this property / owner? Rivera has a full plate (with the Peace Bridge, especially) but, I cannot imagine that he hasn't noticed or been told about the concerns for this property and the owners' history.
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magnum
BB14 = troll = no life = ignore
Regarding the issue at hand: THERE IS NO EXCUSE FOR THIS. We need to start pointing fingers or this will never stop. Heads should roll if this building comes down.
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Colin
1. The demolition was postponed until Saturday at 8AM. Folks are working to find an engineer to look at it, and a judge to issue an injunction.
2. Rivera was at the rally, working the phone and trying to get Tobe and others on the horn. Rivera's not the problem.
3. The owner has had offers but has turned them down, including one as recently as three months ago.
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Colin
1. The demolition was postponed until Saturday at 8AM. Folks are working to find an engineer to look at it, and a judge to issue an injunction.
2. Rivera was at the rally, working the phone and trying to get Tobe and others on the horn. Rivera's not the problem.
3. The owner has had offers but has turned them down, including one as recently as three months ago.
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RaChaCha
About Rivera, I'm pleased to say that he seems to be becoming quite a preservation-minded councilman. I've run into him at four events just in the last couple of months, all preservation-related. And he's not just putting in appearances - he's very engaged (as Colin describes). At one of these events, he joined a dozen of us for a tour of the Kleinhans neighborhood, and stayed on the tour for a full hour and a half. At several points the preservationist leading the tour stopped the group and talked at length about the value of preservation to the neighborhood, and Rivera said that he wished several of his Common Council colleagues were on the tour, seeing and hearing what he was. And that wasn't just lip service - I believe something very much like that was slated to happen last week.
If I relocate to Buffalo, I'd love to move into Rivera's district, so I can vote for him and help keep him in office - he's one of the good guys. It doesn't surprise me to hear that he's working hard on this issue as Colin describes - I hope and pray that he can help broker a solution.
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sonyactivision
It almost doesn't seem enough to condemn a structure. Perhaps, negligent individuals can be condemned as well: barred from owning any building or brokering any deed or title. This situation calls for Mr Freudenheim to be restrained from any such dealings. Taxpayers shouldn't be asked to clean up after these scumbags more than once.
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Username
It is unfortunate that the building is in such disrepair.
However, as an owner of a property directly endangered by the structure's instability, I find it somewhat disturbing that people are so adamant about preventing its demolition. Perhaps they would not be so eager to hold off the demolition if it were their own back yard and home that was in danger.
I sympathize with the concerns of neighbors, and I mean no offense to preservationists, but I own adjoining property, and I'd like to be able to move home as soon as possible. This is costly and inconvenient, and as a realist, I don't think I'll be reimbursed for my expenses in being displaced. I'm sorry that the building has to come down, but if it has to, it has to. I would ask those who are protesting the demolition to consider the safety and interests of those of us whose homes lie under the shadow of a massive, dangerous collapsing brick building before they assemble on the picket line.
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benfranklin
Username, you shouldn't have to aplogize for wanting to get home. All those picketers will get in their cars and drive home, thinking they've done some great deed, while they leave this complicated issue in their rear view mirror. While you figure out where your spending the night, their toughest decision will be where to stop for Sushi on the way back to Williamsville.
A lot of good has occurred in the city over the last few years. Focusing so much effort on a building that is so far gone is counter productive, and makes the 'preservationist' appear out of touch, limiting your influence where you really could be making a difference (buildings that still have hope). Stop making it sound like every landlord has some 'superplan' to let their property rot so they can get the city to tear it down. Most landlords are investing in their property, and improving a good percentage of the city. Working with these landowners, not against them, is the only way you'll prevent this type of problem in the future.
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Colin
1. Most of the picketers walked or biked home, actually, since it was mostly folks from the area. Thanks for the gratuitous suburbs smack, though.
2. I feel for the people who've been most directly impacted, but I don't see how this is a complicated issue. The city should enforce its laws, and property owners should obey them. Neighborhoods shouldn't be made to pay for their failure to do so.
3. This isn't about "every landlord." It's about one particular landlord who was allowed to ignore his duties under the law, to the detriment of an entire neighborhood. And people did try to work with him -- by buying the property and rehabbing it -- but he preffered to let it sit and rot.
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benfranklin
I'm glad you 'feel' for the guy you've made homeless for the night. Only looking at one side of the issue does keep it less complicated, but it also makes it much less likely you're going to find a real solution.
Have you gone down and spent a day in housing court? 95% of the court's time is tied up with poor homeowners barely keeping their heads above water, trying to keep some minimal living standard. They get in fights with the neighbors, then call code enforcement on each other. Would you throw these people in jail? Is there a difference between this building and one on the east side?
I think it's unlikely he skates from any demolition bill. Unless they put on an act in housing court, it's my belief that they do a pretty thorough financial check to see if the amount paid to the city, per month, is in accordance with the person's assets.
I'd prefer to see buildings like these stay. Personally, I have money in properties older than this one. Increasing inspections raises the cost of ownership, and in the long run causes more problems like this, not less.
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Colin
I haven't made anyone homeless for the night. That's on the building's wealthy owner for allowing it to fall apart, and on the city for letting it happen.
And I think the situation you cite is exactly the problem. Average homeowners are given a rough time, while substantial property owners get off relatively easy. That seems entirely backwards to me. It's time for the city to stop going after people for a bit of missing trim on their home, and start going after wealthy people who let their investment properties rot. Even is we can't save the livery, we've shined a bit of light on how backward this whole business can be.
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wizardofza
No feeling sorry for (or questioning his financial abilities) Bob Freudenheim. He hails from a very wealthy family.
They've been privileged for quite some time, going back many decades beginning in Germany. If I recall my history correctly, once upon a time the Freudenheims owned the largest logging and timber operation in pre-WWII Berlin until they had to flee from the Nazis because of their ethnic disposition. Buffalo, NY provided a warm, welcoming place for the family to thrive in America. It's nice to see their decedents paying back this city so kindly with nothing but kindness, gratitude, and respect....
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sbrof
you need to think about the whole picture here. Yes some people in close proximity to this buildings might be in danger. No one really knows the structural stability of the whole buildings. But without changing the system how is this going to be prevented next time to the countless other people near large old buildings with absentee landlords.
This building is showing just how basackwards our city's ability to enforce its own health and safety laws are. The city is being negligent by allowing structures to fall into such disrepear. It is first and foremost the owners responsibility but it is also the city's to get on their ass to actually do something. If they don't. Then the city should take the property. Offer it up the next day for a dollar or the highest bidder. Lets put property into the hands of people who care.. you know.. the ones that won't let walls collapse on their neighbors.
I would much rather pay for legal fees to take this property and sell it to someone else than to py for the demolition of a structure that is going to change the urban character of a whole block.
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metrobflo
Bricks can be replaced and re-pointed for a fraction of the price tag of this demolition. This sickens me. City hall should be ashamed of its self. Sham on Lord Brown and his posse of marry building inspectors. CITY HALL IS A JOKE!
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Rez
Bob Freudenheim is a disgrace. Old buildings like this are art wonders. Correct me if I'm not wrong but he owned this structure for 30 years, That's a substantial time that should have allowed the roof to be repaired and the walls to be fortified.
He should be indicted for destruction of a building and given jail time.
The City of Buffalo and the local judicial system is at fault for not enforcing all sorts of laws in the city.
It was lucky that a person didn't get killed when the wall collapsed.
What kind of justice system do we have in Buffalo when a Buffalo Bill can hit and run down a women from Milton Ontario? What sort of justice system do we have in WNY that gives probation to the young arsonist who set the fire that nearly killed Firefighter Reed? What kind of justice system do we have that allows buildings like this to deteriorate for generations?
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Matthewjohnp
Let's just kill Bob, ok, lets burn him at the steak and eat his heart. Because this is a terrible thing, right?. Lets kill his wife too and if he has a dog let's kill that too, let's dig up his parents and kill them again. Let's kill every friend he ever had because this is serious stuff, I mean it involves an empty derlict building and god knows Buffalo will turn out for an empty derlict building any day of the week. Oh did they just kill like the 33rd person on the East Side? Thank god it didn't involve a derlict building because then, gosh we'd do something about it....
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Olcott_Beach
If the Webb Building was saved; than there is no reason as to why White's Livery Stable cannot be saved as well.
Apparently, Robert Freudenheim, is "old Buffalo money" so he certainly has the funds but so many of these types are cheap old bastards who could care less about unique architecture.
I once had our local town inspector inform me that I could not keep exposed fire wood stacked in my yard (neatly stacked, by the way) and I responded with a few colorful adjectives. However, exposed fire wood is a far cry from blatant neglect that Freudenheim is guilty of committing.
Incidentally, where are the City building inspectors?
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scarmina
We spent a few days two weeks ago trying to come up with a concept design for this building. My partner toured the building and the pictures he took were probably the last befor the collapse. There were some vintage (although ruined) cars still being stored in parts of the upper floors (not too smart). There were signs of failure in the structure and my partner cautiously backed out of the building. The structural system is this building depends on the third floor trusses to support the second and first floor.......very unusual.
Our concept was workable and would have resulted in eight or nine apartment units, plus first floor, indoor parking. The disrespect the building owner showed the building is evident. Much like the WEBB Building though, we feel this building can be saved. It is not any worse off and is every bit as valuable to Buffalo's history.
Carmina Wood Morris, PC
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kooksapalooza
is there realistically a chance that this is gonan turn into something if its saved or is this just going to be a hard fought battle to save a building so it can rot for another 30 yrs?...im not being sarcastic i actually want to know
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