Nearly four months after a Willets Point task force submitted development suggestions for the toxic area east of Citi Field, officials finally have released information about the plans.

The city has long-sought to build a neighborhood to replace a series of auto shops and industrial businesses in the gritty section of Queens. After a state court invalidated Bloomberg-era plans for the project, Mayor Bill de Blasio decided to start over. He tapped The Related Cos. and Sterling Equities to build a 1,100-unit affordable-housing complex on 6 acres and convened a task force to come up with potential plans for the remaining 17 acres of the project's first phase.

The task force delivered its recommendations to the Economic Development Corp. in September. And after initially denying it had received them in a bizarre case of finger-pointing, the city publicly posted summaries of two development scenarios this week.

One calls for a soccer stadium of up to 25,000 seats, according to the documents. Parking for the venue would be shared with Citi Field. In addition, the plan calls for retail, open space, a school, new police and fire stations and a residential building.

The second scenario follows a more typical mixed-use format that would produce six blocks of residential development, retail, open space, a high school and a fire station along with a health center.

The development corporation said that the scenarios are being used by Related and Sterling to draw up more specific plans, which will then be submitted to the city and subject to further public comment.

There is currently no time frame for the development team to respond with its design. And after initially saying they had not received final recommendations earlier this month, Related and Sterling said this week that they have feedback from the task force in hand that the team will use "to progress conversations with [the city] on the next phase of the Willets Point development."