Carvel: its past, present and future


PINE PLAINS — The Millerton News met with the Durst Organization’s Assistant Vice President Alexander Durst, spokesman Jordan Barowitz and Dan Stone of The Chazen Companies April 12 to discuss the history and future of the Carvel development project. The development could add some 950 homes to Pine Plains if it is approved by the board.

The applicant’s Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS), a document required under the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA), is currently being reviewed by the Planning Board. This document will partially indicate whether Carvel will or will not harm the environment.

In 1960, Thomas Carvel built the Carvel Country Club, which is located off of Route 199 and can also be accessed from the Taconic State parkway. Two hundred and thirty lots (not homes), which are on record with Dutchess County, are currently delineated on the property.

"Those are not considered part of the project," Stone stressed. Stone said that the topography of the site makes it perfect for development. "Douglas Durst wouldn’t have done it anywhere else in Pine Plains," he said.

The Dursts are well known for creating "green," or environmentally conscious, buildings.Carvel is no different.

"We want to set the environmental bar very high with a world-class golf club and facility," Stone said.

This will be accomplished, he said, by preserving wetlands, building into hills so as to not harm the vistas of Pine Plains and utilizing local building materials in order to cut down truck traffic, among other things.

The applicant looks to glean at least 10 percent of the energy needed for the site from renewable resources, such as geothermal heating. There won’t be much shopping on site, Stone said, so the development won’t take away business from shops in the center of Pine Plains.

Barowitz predicts the development will bring roughly $7 million per year to the Pine Plains Central School District, as well as $2 million or more to Dutchess County in tax revenue.

"We’ll provide very few students," the spokesman said.

When asked what clientele the Durst Organization is aiming for with Carvel, Durst simply said "those who can afford to have a second home."

"Even if it was fully occupied with permanent people, the effect on the school system would still be positive," Barowitz added. "This will do for Pine Plains what weekenders did for Millbrook."

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