Shortly before a city-wide law to protect green areas
of the city from being
destroyed by construction companies came into force
Sunday, Governor Valentina Matviyenko reportedly signed a decree allowing
local developer LEK ESTATE to chop down trees
around buildings No. 45 and No. 51 on Zanevsky Prospekt.
The company plans to erect a new residential block on the site within
the
next year.
Residents of 51 Zanevsky Prospekt have set up an action group that is
angry
that Matviyenko "makes promises by signing one
document and breaks it [the promise] by signing another."
"We have lived here all these years and now they would come and
destroy all
the trees around here," Leonid Fedotov, a member of the action group
said
Monday
in an interview. "There is a childrens'playground. Where will they
play now?
And why is this that we have to put up with all the noise of construction?"
"If [City Hall] would give us apartments of an equal value, it
would have
been fine, but there are rumors they want to relocate us to somewhere
in the
suburbs," he
said. "Why would we want to do that?"
Another resident, who wanted to be identified only by his first name,
Kirill, and who said he had experienced the horrors of World War II, looked
upset.
Pointing at trees growing along Zanevsky Prospekt, he said: "I
remember we
planted them in 1965 on Victory Day anniversary and now they want to chop
them
down."
The action group has a copy of a decree dated May 5 and signed by
Matviyenko, that "approves a decision made by the investment and
tender
commission Dec.
23, 2003 to allow the joint stock company LEK ESTATE to construct a building
with additional premises on a plot of land of 10,104 square meters located
in the
Krasnogvardeisky district."
Meanwhile, the law to protect green areas that came into force at the
weekend bans construction in so-called "areas of common use,"
in other words
in parks,
gardens and yards next to residential buildings. Any developer who has
to
chop down trees so that they can start a construction project, must plant
the same
amount of trees nearby, the law says.
"The law says that the amount of money a company must pay for removing
trees
cannot be less than the real cost of planting new trees," Greenpeace
wrote
in a
commentary on the law. "Before the law was introduced, the cost was
made
significantly less, just a few hundred rubles for one mature tree,"
Matviyenko promised during her successful gubernatorial campaign last
year
to halt construction encroaching on green areas, but Smolny delayed the
law
for
months after it was approved by the Legislative Assembly. In those months,
she appears to have given approvals for a lot of construction in green
areas.
Matviyenko signed the law May 21 and it came into force Sunday.
Greenpeace said contracts signed before the law was put in force would
not
be revised because the law is not retroactive.
Meanwhile, a protest over fill-in construction on at 9 Institutsky Prospekt
in the Vyborg district stopped traffic Monday after residents blocked
the road to make their anger felt.
After weeks of actions against a construction project in their yard
and
24-hour patrols organized by residents themselves to prevent construction
vehicles from
coming into their yard, City Hall gave an order to stop the construction
Thursday to cool down a conflict that had raised hackles.
But the next day two construction cranes drove into the yard and installed
additional fences around the planned construction site.
"We went there to support the residents," said Andrei Raikov,
a member of
National Bolshevik Party, who headed the protest in a telephone interview
Monday.
"We stopped traffic for two hours and demanded that the local authorities
show up to explain themselves to residents.
"This situation is very indicative; authorities promise something
in words,
but in practice they do absolutely the opposite thing," he said.
"Nevertheless, we still hope
the construction there will be stopped in the end. We believe in that."
Mikhail Amosov,
head of the Yabloko faction in the Legislative Assembly, said the 9 Institutsky
Prospekt case showed City Hall's was ignoring landowners'rights.
"This case appears more difficult than others about green areas
being
destroyed," Amosov said Monday in a telephone interview.
"There is a rent agreement signed in 1969 between City Hall and
the
residents for this area, and they have paid taxes for it for many years,"
he
added. "Some
outsiders have now come to the residents' land and started building on
it.
"I have looked at the residents'documents and I think they are
in order.
This really puts egg on City Hall's face," he said.
See also:
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