Not in my backyard: Matthew Broderick slams NYU expansion








Ferris Bueller was busy on his day off.

Matthew Broderick made a matinee appearance in Manhattan Supreme Court today to show his opposition to the planned, 20-year, $6 billion expansion of New York University in Greenwich Village.

“I live in the Village, I have children, I like parks. The issue is personal,” the actor, currently starring in “Nice Work if You Can Get It” on Broadway, told reporters before heading off to prepare for an evening performance.

NYU was given the go-ahead by the City Council last summer to take four plots of parkland on Mercer Street between West 3rd and Houston streets for the almost 2 million-square-foot addition to its Greenwich Village campus.





Steven Hirsch



Matthew Broderick leaving the NYU expansion hearings.





Activists sued to block the move in September. And they packed Judge Donna Mills’ courtroom yesterday to hear attorneys argue over whether there will be a separate proceeding on the pocket parks, which is a facet of the larger case.

Judge Mills ordered the parties to state their positions in papers due by mid-March.

Broderick, who played the lead in the 1980s high school comedy “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,” lives on Charles Street with his “Sex & the City” actress wife Sarah Jessica Parker and their three kids.

He joined about 100 of his fellow West Village residents who oppose the plan and turned out for the proceeding yesterday.

“I’m very interested in this whole change that’s potentially going to happen to the Village,” Broderick explained. “I grew up on Washington Square. NYU has just taken more and more of what I think of as a unique and important part of the Village where a huge amount of creativity has come from.”

Playwright and fellow Village resident Kenneth Lonergan, who wrote the screenplays for “Gangs of New York” and “Analyze This,” joined high school classmate Broderick at the hearing.

Outside the courtroom, he bemoaned changes in the neighborhood, saying it was “completely different” 20 years ago and “now there’s frankly huge ugly buildings. It’s appalling. NYU doesn’t own Greenwich Village.”

Last Friday former Parks Commissioner Henry Stern submitted an affidavit largely in support of the community groups.

The city Law Dept. said: “Our opponents’ motion is baseless, and we plan to oppose it. This project underwent thorough and proper review before it was overwhelmingly approved.”

jmarsh@nypost.com










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