Yes but you have to remember that amusements have always remained in Coney 
Island.  As for Asbury, they died.  


----- Original Message ----
From: Hinge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: AsburyPark@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, June 18, 2007 12:15:17 PM
Subject: [AsburyPark] AP could use a bit of this kind of thinking...

Coney Island condo plan beached
BY RACHEL MONAHAN and JOTHAM SEDERSTROM
DAILY NEWS WRITERS
Monday, June 18th 2007, 4:00 AM

You can forget about oceanfront views from high-rise balconies and takeout from 
Nathan's Famous.
Mega-developer Thor Equities, which has reportedly laid out more than $100 
million so 
far to rejuvenate Coney Island, has given up on plans for a highly profitable 
residential 
component to its Las Vegas-style amusement park project.
"Thor has believed from the beginning that the amusement and entertainment 
aspect of 
the project was the most important aspect of the project," Thor spokesman Lee 
Silberstein 
said, noting more amusements would be included in a revised version of the 
22-acre plan.
The controversial $2 billion project - which had come under fire from city 
officials and 
residents, because, they said, it would destroy Coney Island's character by 
including 
waterfront housing - had originally earmarked 950,000 square feet for 
residential space.
Now, the plan will have no residential component and no 50-story tower on 
Stillwell Ave., 
as had been proposed, Silberstein said.
"It's significantly smaller," Silberstein said of the overall project. He 
refused to divulge 
specifics of a revised plan or to say how Thor would profit without the sale of 
luxury 
condos.
Carol Hill Albert, who in November sold the legendary Astroland amusement park 
to Thor, 
sighed in relief when told about the project's hairpin turn.
"Nobody has ever thought it was a good idea to have condos south of Surf Ave.," 
said 
Albert, who hopes to relocate her 45-year-old family-owned amusement park 
elsewhere 
along the Coney Island waterfront. "It's all beachfront."
Coney Island USA founder Dick Zigun agreed.
"This is the big break we've all been waiting for," said Zigun, the unofficial 
mayor of Coney 
Island. "We're not against development. Thor just needed to accept the fact 
that at the core 
area, it should be tourism and entertainment. "





       
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