Susan Lee, the founder of the Alliance for Community Preservation and Betterment, which has fought the shelters, called the cancellation of 47 Madison Street, which was scheduled to open in 2024 on a site in the shadow of the Manhattan Bridge, “a step in the right direction.”
But Corinne Low, executive director of the Open Hearts Initiative, a group that works to build support for shelters, was critical of the city’s decision. “Caving to backlash will not placate opponents of housing and services for homeless New Yorkers — it will only embolden them,” she said in a statement.
The other two proposed shelters, on Grand Street and on the busy shopping strip of East Broadway, have drawn much more opposition, but they are much further along. The Grand Street facility is scheduled to open this spring, and the East Broadway shelter next year.
The dropping of the Madison Street shelter also comes days after the city said it would close a Radisson Hotel facility in the Financial District that an advocacy group said houses about 200 people.