Demolished Too Soon: 11 Buildings That Should Still Be Standing!

The Folk Art Museum in New York City, by Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects.  Photo: Ozier Muhammad for NYTimes.  When the news broke that MoMA was planning on demolishing the former American Folk Art Museum, the design community responded with a gigantic petition to preserve the architectural gem, designed by Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects, which had …Continue Reading

Demolished Too Soon: 11 Buildings That Should Still Be Standing!

The Folk Art Museum in New York City, by Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects.  Photo: Ozier Muhammad for NYTimes.  When the news broke that MoMA was planning on demolishing the former American Folk Art Museum, the design community responded with a gigantic petition to preserve the architectural gem, designed by Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects, which had …Continue Reading

NYC’s Midtown East: Rezoning and Streetscaping

New York City’s Midtown East will be facing a rezoning in the near future, bringing a dozen office towers into the already crowded neighborhood.  To help the Bloomberg Administration address the issues that may arise with this move, the city has hired sustainable real estate development firm, Jonathan Rose Co.; Dutch Urban Planning firm, Gehl Architects; and the global civil engineering firm, Skanska.  The different firms will be working to develop the streetscape to be known as the East Midtown Public Realm Vision Plan, which is scheduled for release later this year.

The rezoning of Midtown East will be a vast makeover of the neighborhood, covering 63 blocks stretching from East 39th Street to East 57th Street between Fifth and Third Avenues.  The Vision Plan comes as a response to the community board’s and local residents’ concerns over the quality of the development and the implications on the existing neighborhood’s development.  According to Crain’s New York, three workshops will be coordinated with the three participating firms and the city’s planning departments to establish guidelines for the final plan.  This will incorporate a public review process that takes the concerns into consideration.  City Councilman Daniel Garodnick says that the rezoning process is the right step toward a more inviting midtown, and hopes that the recommendations from the consultants will meet budgetary constrictions.

Drawing on design insight and concerns of the public realms through discussions and meetings with stakeholders, the consultants will develop a plan that will serve as a guide which will “feature design tools and action-oriented strategies for improving pedestrian access and other streetscape enhancements to encourage walking and active transportation”.

The new zoning maps will facilitate more office building in the area, increasing the allowable building size by 50 to 200%.  Matt Chaban of Crain’s New York writes that although the area is a premier spot for high rise office towers and a business district, only three towers have been constructed in the area in the past two decades.  These new zoning measures will help inspire more construction.  Developers who decide to take advantage of the redeveloped zoning rights will be able to buy air rights from private landlords or the city and help fund street improvements, which include widening Lexington and Madison Avenues and bringing a chain of public plazas to Vanderbilt Avenue.  Such developments will likely create a secondary business and entertainment district to Times Square, and will help balance the development that is slated for Midtown West.

Chabon points out that critics, locals and Garodnick himself argue that the rezoning is pre-emptive and the hiring of consultants for street improvements at the last minute is a sign that Mayor Bloomberg is trying to push through a last rezoning before leaving office.  With the street improvement plan set to come out in the fall, and the community board voting on the rezoning in June, it is unlikely that voters will have the details of the full scale of the project when making their decisions.  And while the plan for Midtown East’s development has been vague, NYC Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Kahn says that the DOT’s Sustaintable Streets strategic plan, Street Design Manual and World Class Streets study provide the guidelines for designing sustainable and inviting streets for the city’s many functions.

via NYC.gov and Crain’s New York

NYC's Midtown East: Rezoning and Streetscaping originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 21 May 2013.

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NYC’s Midtown East: Rezoning and Streetscaping

New York City’s Midtown East will be facing a rezoning in the near future, bringing a dozen office towers into the already crowded neighborhood.  To help the Bloomberg Administration address the issues that may arise with this move, the city has hired sustainable real estate development firm, Jonathan Rose Co.; Dutch Urban Planning firm, Gehl Architects; and the global civil engineering firm, Skanska.  The different firms will be working to develop the streetscape to be known as the East Midtown Public Realm Vision Plan, which is scheduled for release later this year.

The rezoning of Midtown East will be a vast makeover of the neighborhood, covering 63 blocks stretching from East 39th Street to East 57th Street between Fifth and Third Avenues.  The Vision Plan comes as a response to the community board’s and local residents’ concerns over the quality of the development and the implications on the existing neighborhood’s development.  According to Crain’s New York, three workshops will be coordinated with the three participating firms and the city’s planning departments to establish guidelines for the final plan.  This will incorporate a public review process that takes the concerns into consideration.  City Councilman Daniel Garodnick says that the rezoning process is the right step toward a more inviting midtown, and hopes that the recommendations from the consultants will meet budgetary constrictions.

Drawing on design insight and concerns of the public realms through discussions and meetings with stakeholders, the consultants will develop a plan that will serve as a guide which will “feature design tools and action-oriented strategies for improving pedestrian access and other streetscape enhancements to encourage walking and active transportation”.

The new zoning maps will facilitate more office building in the area, increasing the allowable building size by 50 to 200%.  Matt Chaban of Crain’s New York writes that although the area is a premier spot for high rise office towers and a business district, only three towers have been constructed in the area in the past two decades.  These new zoning measures will help inspire more construction.  Developers who decide to take advantage of the redeveloped zoning rights will be able to buy air rights from private landlords or the city and help fund street improvements, which include widening Lexington and Madison Avenues and bringing a chain of public plazas to Vanderbilt Avenue.  Such developments will likely create a secondary business and entertainment district to Times Square, and will help balance the development that is slated for Midtown West.

Chabon points out that critics, locals and Garodnick himself argue that the rezoning is pre-emptive and the hiring of consultants for street improvements at the last minute is a sign that Mayor Bloomberg is trying to push through a last rezoning before leaving office.  With the street improvement plan set to come out in the fall, and the community board voting on the rezoning in June, it is unlikely that voters will have the details of the full scale of the project when making their decisions.  And while the plan for Midtown East’s development has been vague, NYC Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Kahn says that the DOT’s Sustaintable Streets strategic plan, Street Design Manual and World Class Streets study provide the guidelines for designing sustainable and inviting streets for the city’s many functions.

via NYC.gov and Crain’s New York

NYC's Midtown East: Rezoning and Streetscaping originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 21 May 2013.

send to Twitter | Share on Facebook | What do you think about this?

NYC’s Midtown East: Rezoning and Streetscaping

New York City’s Midtown East will be facing a rezoning in the near future, bringing a dozen office towers into the already crowded neighborhood.  To help the Bloomberg Administration address the issues that may arise with this move, the city has hired sustainable real estate development firm, Jonathan Rose Co.; Dutch Urban Planning firm, Gehl Architects; and the global civil engineering firm, Skanska.  The different firms will be working to develop the streetscape to be known as the East Midtown Public Realm Vision Plan, which is scheduled for release later this year.

The rezoning of Midtown East will be a vast makeover of the neighborhood, covering 63 blocks stretching from East 39th Street to East 57th Street between Fifth and Third Avenues.  The Vision Plan comes as a response to the community board’s and local residents’ concerns over the quality of the development and the implications on the existing neighborhood’s development.  According to Crain’s New York, three workshops will be coordinated with the three participating firms and the city’s planning departments to establish guidelines for the final plan.  This will incorporate a public review process that takes the concerns into consideration.  City Councilman Daniel Garodnick says that the rezoning process is the right step toward a more inviting midtown, and hopes that the recommendations from the consultants will meet budgetary constrictions.

Drawing on design insight and concerns of the public realms through discussions and meetings with stakeholders, the consultants will develop a plan that will serve as a guide which will “feature design tools and action-oriented strategies for improving pedestrian access and other streetscape enhancements to encourage walking and active transportation”.

The new zoning maps will facilitate more office building in the area, increasing the allowable building size by 50 to 200%.  Matt Chaban of Crain’s New York writes that although the area is a premier spot for high rise office towers and a business district, only three towers have been constructed in the area in the past two decades.  These new zoning measures will help inspire more construction.  Developers who decide to take advantage of the redeveloped zoning rights will be able to buy air rights from private landlords or the city and help fund street improvements, which include widening Lexington and Madison Avenues and bringing a chain of public plazas to Vanderbilt Avenue.  Such developments will likely create a secondary business and entertainment district to Times Square, and will help balance the development that is slated for Midtown West.

Chabon points out that critics, locals and Garodnick himself argue that the rezoning is pre-emptive and the hiring of consultants for street improvements at the last minute is a sign that Mayor Bloomberg is trying to push through a last rezoning before leaving office.  With the street improvement plan set to come out in the fall, and the community board voting on the rezoning in June, it is unlikely that voters will have the details of the full scale of the project when making their decisions.  And while the plan for Midtown East’s development has been vague, NYC Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Kahn says that the DOT’s Sustaintable Streets strategic plan, Street Design Manual and World Class Streets study provide the guidelines for designing sustainable and inviting streets for the city’s many functions.

via NYC.gov and Crain’s New York

NYC's Midtown East: Rezoning and Streetscaping originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 21 May 2013.

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Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates

Architects: James Carpenter Design Associates Inc
Location: New York, NY
Architect In Charge: Foster and Partners
Design Team: Johanna Kindvall, Jonathan Forsythe
Year: 2006
Photographs: Andreas Keller

Architect Of Record: Adamson Associates Architects
Design Principal: Torsten Schlauersbach, Richard Kress
Water Consultant: Fluidity Design Consultants
Cast Glass Fabrication: John Lewis Glass

In 2001, the Hearst Corporation appointed Foster and Partners to expand 959 Eighth Avenue, a building designed in 1926 by Joseph Urban and George C. Post for William Randolph Hearst.  Foster and Partners’ tower design reunites the Hearst Corporation’s multiple media interests under one roof.  The new tower preserves the landmark’s original façade while creating a technological and ecological structure that extends the original building aspirations.

An inclined plane traversed diagonally by escalators, connects the lobby entrance with the main lobby and elevator floor thirty feet above. JCDA was asked to design a water feature along this plane. Cast glass was selected as a medium for the waterfall so that its profile and resulting internal reflections could be designed to redirect light. By controlling the water temperature the water feature is a functional method of controlling temperature and humidity within the vast atrium space.

The diagrid of the building’s structure is reminiscent of cut diamonds. JCDA took this idea to explore the idea of controlling the incoming daylight. The complexity of the cast glass form allowed for a high level of light control through the glass’ internal reflections.

The overall layout of the water cascade corresponds with the major diagonal grid of the building. Staggered joints between the glass planks follow the diagonal grid of the support framing below. Accent blocks with polished surfaces matching the Ice Falls incline rhythmically accentuate the diagrid at these staggered joints, while providing points of mirror-like reflection within the field of kinetically activated water reflections.

The waterfall consists of cast glass blocks whose special profiles create an even and controlled flow of water. The large volume of the lobby is dissolved in the luminous plane of water and glass. The rays of light from the clerestories at the elevator floor are captured inside the facetted cast glass accentuating the beauty and brightness of the water’s energy. The crystalline beauty of the glass and the flowing water is the result a series of internal reflections and refractive turbulences, creating the phenomenon of luminosity.

Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc © Andreas Keller
Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc © Andreas Keller
Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc © Andreas Keller
Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc © Andreas Keller
Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc © Andreas Keller
Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc © Andreas Keller
Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc © Andreas Keller
Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc © Andreas Keller
Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc © Andreas Keller
Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc © Andreas Keller
Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc © Andreas Keller
Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc Floor Plan
Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc Detail
Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc Detail
Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates Inc Detail

Ice Falls / James Carpenter Design Associates originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 21 May 2013.

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Robert Hammond And Joshua David Win Architizer Advocacy Award For Saving The High Line

Robert Hammond and Joshua David, co-founders of Friends of the High Line, accept their Architizer award. Architizer Honorees Robert Hammond and Joshua David aren’t architects. They don’t have design degrees or urban planning experience. But that didn’t stop them from banding together to save an old elevated railway track in Manhattan’s West Side from oblivion. …Continue Reading

Robert Hammond And Joshua David Win Architizer Advocacy Award For Saving The High Line

Robert Hammond and Joshua David, co-founders of Friends of the High Line, accept their Architizer award. Architizer Honorees Robert Hammond and Joshua David aren’t architects. They don’t have design degrees or urban planning experience. But that didn’t stop them from banding together to save an old elevated railway track in Manhattan’s West Side from oblivion. …Continue Reading