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New York: The Latest Architecture and News

Modular Residential Tower To Be Built at Atlantic Yards

Modular Residential Tower To Be Built at Atlantic Yards - Featured Image
© SHoP Architects

Forest City Ratner Companies (FCRC) just announced that they will be partnering with Skanska, one of the world’s largest construction and development groups, for the B2 project. This project is making headlines because it will be the first residential tower that is part of the Atlantic Yards Development in Brooklyn using modular construction. FCRC plans to break ground on the 32-story building on December 18th and anticipates that the building will open in 2014. While high-rise modular technology has been initially developed for use at Atlantic Yards, this new industry has the potential to create modular components for construction projects across New York City and worldwide, becoming the first major manufacturing expansion in New York City since manufacturing began its decline over a generation ago. More information after the break.

Avery Fisher Hall To Be "Radically" Renovated

Avery Fisher Hall To Be "Radically" Renovated - Featured Image
Interior of Avery Fisher Hall. Courtesy of Wikipedia Commons User Mikhail Klassen at en.wikipedia

About a decade's passed since Foster+Partners won the competition to re-design Avery Fisher Hall (as part of Lincoln Center's campus-wide re-haul, designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro), and the famous music hall is finally ready to go through with it - just not necessarily with Foster+Partners.

After Lincoln Center and the New York Philharmonic failed to raise the $300 million they needed to cover construction costs, and due to concerns that displacing the orchestra would jeopardize potential revenue, Foster+Partners' plans languished. However, the Philharmonic is now under new leadership, and its young directors are anxious to transform the conventional music hall, hence why they've decided to solicit new proposals for the building.

As the Orchestra's new executive eirector, Matthew VanBesien, told the New York Times: “If you’re not thinking about the way in which our art form and music and audiences are evolving, you’re not serving the art form long term. You really want to build this next great hall in a new way, to do the kinds of things you maybe are doing but want to do in a more compelling way or maybe can’t even imagine yet.”

More info about the proposal for the new Avery Fisher Hall, after the break...

Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates to Design Giant Office Building Next to Grand Central Terminal

Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates to Design Giant Office Building Next to Grand Central Terminal - Featured Image
© Rob Bennett for The Wall Street Journal

Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates were recently selected to design a giant office building the landlord hopes to build next to Grand Central Terminal. Selected by SL Green Realty Corp., the architects’ design would be one of the largest Midtown towers on the East Side in a generation. While building in New York is a challenge, SL Green is moving ahead full steam with planning. The company is in discussions with the Metropolitan Transportation Authority to obtain additional development rights by building pedestrian improvements including underground connectors to Grand Central, according to executives informed of the planning. More information after the break.

Masterplan for Hudson Square Streetscape Improvements / Mathews Nielsen Landscape Architects

Masterplan for Hudson Square Streetscape Improvements / Mathews Nielsen Landscape Architects - Image 7 of 4
© 2012 Hudson Square Connection Rendering by Mathews Nielsen Landscape Architects

Mathews Nielsen Landscape Architects shared with us their design for the streetscape masterplan for Hudson Square in Manhattan, New York. Designed to transform the district’s public realm into a socially, economically, and environmentally sustainable neighborhood, the project will serve area workers and, eventually, residents. The masterplan creates a pedestrian-focused district accessible from all directions and adjacent neighborhoods—including SoHo, TriBeCa, and Greenwich Village—that coordinates the needs of the Holland Tunnel, a regional transportation facility, with those of the re-imagined neighborhood. More images and architects’ description after the break.

In Progress: Campbell Sports Center / Steven Holl Architects

In Progress: Campbell Sports Center / Steven Holl Architects - University, Facade, BeamIn Progress: Campbell Sports Center / Steven Holl Architects - UniversityIn Progress: Campbell Sports Center / Steven Holl Architects - UniversityIn Progress: Campbell Sports Center / Steven Holl Architects - University, Beam, FacadeIn Progress: Campbell Sports Center / Steven Holl Architects - More Images+ 13

  • Architects

  • Location

    218th Street, New York
  • Architect in Charge

    Steven Holl, Chris McVoy
  • Design Team

    Marcus Carter, Christiane Deptolla, Peter Englaender, Runar Halldorsson, Jackie Luk, Filipe Taboada, Dimitra Tsachrelia, Ebbie Wisecarver
  • Associate in Charge

    Olaf Schmidt
  • Area

    4459.0 m2
  • Project Year

    2012
  • Photographs

    Chris McVoy, Andy Ryan
  • Architects

'Time Light' Steven Holl Lecture at the Cooper Union

'Time Light' Steven Holl Lecture at the Cooper Union - Featured Image
Courtesy of The Architectural League

Hosted by the Architectural League and co-sponsored by The Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture of The Cooper Union, Steven Holl will lecture in the Great Hall at The Cooper Union on November 28 at 7:00pm. Holl’s architecture and writing has undergone a shift in emphasis, from his earlier concern with typology to his current interest in phenomenology. This “Time Light” lecture is dedicated to Lebbeus Woods and will show both early and recent works by Steven Holl Architects. Following the lecture, Steven Holl will be joined in conversation by Sanford Kwinter. For more information on the event, please visit here.

Hudson Yards' Long Awaited Makeover

Hudson Yards' Long Awaited Makeover - Image 4 of 4
Photo: Rendering by Visualhouse

The west side of midtown Manhattan is probably one of the more unexplored areas of New York City by residents and tourists alike. Aside from the Jacob Javits Center, and the different programs off of the Hudson River Parkway that runs parallel to the waterfront, there is very little reason to walk through this industry – and infrastructure – dominated expanse of land full of manufacturers, body shops, parking facilities and vacant lots. The NYC government and various agencies, aware of the lost potential of this area, began hatching plans in 2001 to develop this 48-block, 26-acre section, bound by 43rd Street to the North, 8th Ave to the East, 30th Street to the South and the West Side Highway to the West.

The new Hudson Yards, NYC’s largest development, will be a feat of collaboration between many agencies and designers. The result will be 26 million square feet of new office development, 20,000 units of housing, 2 million square feet of retail, and 3 million square feet of hotel space, mixed use development featuring cultural and parking uses, 12 acres of public open space, a new public school and an extension of a subway line the 7 that currently terminates at Times Square-42nd Street, reintroducing the otherwise infrastructurally isolated portion of the city back into the life of midtown Manhattan. All this for $800 million with up to $3 billion in public money.

Join us after the break for details and images.

Parrish Art Museum / Herzog & de Meuron

Parrish Art Museum / Herzog & de Meuron - Facade, Beam
Parrish Art Museum / Herzog & de Meuron; Photos © Matthu Placek

Parrish Art Museum / Herzog & de Meuron - Beam, Arch, Facade, LightingParrish Art Museum / Herzog & de Meuron - FacadeParrish Art Museum / Herzog & de Meuron - Beam, Facade, HandrailParrish Art Museum / Herzog & de Meuron - Beam, FacadeParrish Art Museum / Herzog & de Meuron - More Images+ 41

Water Mill, United States
  • Architects: Herzog & de Meuron
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  34510 ft²
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2012
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Panelite

Extended Deadlines - Battery Conservancy Americas Design Competition 2012: Draw Up A Chair

Extended Deadlines - Battery Conservancy Americas Design Competition 2012: Draw Up A Chair - Featured Image
Courtesy of The Battery Conservancy

The Battery Conservancy Americas Design Competition 2012: Draw Up A Chair, which we published a couple months ago here, has received an impressive number of registrations to-date and continue to receive wonderful design submissions. Due to the impact of SuperStorm Sandy on many of their registered and would-be participants, they recently announced that they have extended the competition submission deadline to Monday, November 19. For more information, please visit here.

Post-Hurricane Sandy: Solutions for a Resilient City

Post-Hurricane Sandy: Solutions for a Resilient City - Featured Image
Hurricane Sandy damage north of Seaside, N.J. on Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012. © Governor’s Office / Tim Larsen

In the wake of Hurricane Sandy, as communities band together to clean up the devastation and utility companies work tirelessly to restore the infrastructure that keeps New York City running, planners and policy makers are debating the next steps to making the city as resilient to natural disaster as we once thought it was. We have at our hands a range of options to debate and design and the political leverage to make some of these solutions a reality. The question now is, which option or combination of options is most suitable for protecting New York City and its boroughs? Follow us after the break for more.

'NAWT Balloons' Land Art Generator Initiative Competition Entry / Norman Kelley

'NAWT Balloons' Land Art Generator Initiative Competition Entry / Norman Kelley - Image 7 of 4
Courtesy of Norman Kelley

Designed for the Land Art Generator Initiative competition, the ‘NAWT Balloons’ concept, which was recently shortlisted in the competition, aims to couple the image of an oversized helium-filled teardrop with a nuanced application of wind energy technology. While the balloon’s image and subsequent geometry are the primitives to the proposal, the deployment on the Fresh Kills site ignites an interest in the oversized and the attenuated. Designed by Norman Kelley, through its multiplication and reconfiguration, this design may be able to produce new, yet familiar, collections of iconicity. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Foster+Partners' First US Residential Building Breaks Ground

Foster+Partners' First US Residential Building Breaks Ground - Featured Image
Courtesy of dbox branding & creative for Foster+Partners

50 UN Plaza, Foster+Partners' first residential building in the U.S., broke ground this morning. With the Hearst Tower long finished, Tower 2 at Ground Zero near complete, and a new iconic building planned for 425 Park Avenue, 50 UN Plaza will only further solidify Lord Foster's mark on New York City.

The 44-story luxury tower's privileged spot at the United Nations Plaza will give it remarkable views of the UN Building, the East River, and the Manhattan skyline. According to Foster, the building's deep bay windows (which line each of the tower's 3 volumes) will maximize that view and, along with its steel and glass facade, give the tower a distinctive, "jewel-like quality": “The slender proportion of 50 United Nations Plaza is attenuated by the vertical stacks of bay windows, which give it a distinctive identity[...] The polished stainless steel detailing of the facade is in the sprit of earlier historic towers in the city and it reflects the sharp quality of light which is special to New York." 

The building, whose construction will incorporate recycled materials, also has a strong environmental agenda, combining active and passive energy strategies.

According to the New York Observer, the tower's 87 units will range in size from 1,100 square feet one-bedrooms; three bedrooms as big as 3,000 square feet; full-floor residences; and a penthouse duplex, measuring about 10,000 square feet. One of the marquee features will also be a private driveway. The tower is expected to cost $500 million and be completed in 2014.

More images and Foster+Partner's description of 50 UN Plaza, after the break...

'Solar Loop' Competition Entry / Paolo Venturella & MenoMenoPiu Architects

'Solar Loop' Competition Entry / Paolo Venturella & MenoMenoPiu Architects - Featured Image
© +imgs

Designed by Paolo Venturella & MenoMenoPiu Architects, their ‘Solar Loop’ finalist entry for the Land Art Generator Initiative competition aims to expose more surface as possible to the southern solar rays. Sited in FreshKills Park in New York City, the shape comes directly from the solar diagrams, and deals easily with the sun following it with the best angle almost like a frozen artificial sunflower.bThe aesthetic of the sculpture is the result of this dialogue that becomes synthesis between the solar power and the park. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Photography: The Rockaways, Post-Sandy / Amanda Kirkpatrick

Photography: The Rockaways, Post-Sandy / Amanda Kirkpatrick - Image 1 of 4
© Amanda Kirkpatrick

Hurricane Sandy has come and gone, but the destruction she left in her path remains a stark reminder of her strength. 

Photographer Amanda Kirkpatrick has shared with us her images of The Rockaways in Queens, an upper-class beach neighborhood that was one of the areas hit hardest by the storm. Kirkpatrick's objective eye documents the twisted boardwalks and unrecognizably distorted homes in an almost "clinical" way, honestly portraying the damage from the perspective of the broken structures themselves.

If you're interested in getting involved with Hurricane Sandy Recovery Efforts, you can get more information here. For more images from Amanda Kirkpatrick, read on after the break...

Photography: The Rockaways, Post-Sandy / Amanda Kirkpatrick - Image 1 of 4Photography: The Rockaways, Post-Sandy / Amanda Kirkpatrick - Image 3 of 4Photography: The Rockaways, Post-Sandy / Amanda Kirkpatrick - Image 6 of 4Photography: The Rockaways, Post-Sandy / Amanda Kirkpatrick - Image 7 of 4Photography: The Rockaways, Post-Sandy / Amanda Kirkpatrick - More Images+ 3

MoMA: Tokyo 1955–1970: A New Avant-Garde

MoMA: Tokyo 1955–1970: A New Avant-Garde  - Image 8 of 4
Tokyo 1955–1970 A New Avant-Garde; Courtesy of MoMA

The Museum of Modern Art in NYC is launching an exhibit called Tokyo 1955–1970: A New Avant-Garde, that investigates the transformation of Tokyo from a war-torn nation into an international center for arts, culture and commerce. The exhibition will run from November 18 through February 25, 2012 and includes over 200 works of various media including painting, sculpture, photography, architecture, drawings, graphic design, video and documentary film.

More after the break.

'The City That Never Was' Symposium

'The City That Never Was' Symposium - Featured Image
Courtesy of The Architectural League of New York

Co-organized, in cooperation with the Architectural League, by Christopher Marcinkoski and Javier Arpa, The City That Never Was symposium is a day-long event that uses the current crisis in Spain as a lens to reconsider patterns of urbanization and development around the world. Taking place November 9th from 9:00am-5:00pm at the Scholastic Building in New York, the event will reconsider how planners, designers, politicians, and financiers conceive of and realize large-scale contemporary urbanization and settlement. This event seeks to better understand the systems that have produced certain imbalances resulting from this urban growth and explore new models and approaches for urbanization and development. For more information, please visit here.

Iwan Baan vs. Sandy: The Story Behind That Iconic NYC Shot

Iwan Baan vs. Sandy: The Story Behind That Iconic NYC Shot - Featured Image
Photo: Iwan Baan for New York Magazine

We got in touch with Iwan Baan to ask him how on earth he got that incredible aerial shot of a Sandy-struck New York City for New York Magazine; he told us what it was like to face the frenzy and fly into the storm itself. Read his incredible story, after the break...

Winners announced of the 2012 Land Art Generator Initiative Competition for Freshkills Park

Winners announced of the 2012 Land Art Generator Initiative Competition for Freshkills Park  - Image 19 of 4
Scene-Sensor // Crossing Social and Ecological Flows / James Murray and Shota Vashakmadze; Courtesy of LAGI

Winners of the 2012 Land Art Generator Initiative Competition for Freshkills Park in Staten Island, NYC are out. With 4 placed winners and a long list of shortlisted projects, the range of ideas shows how designers are exploring many different options for sustainable energy infrastructure.

The Winners:

  • First: Scene-Sensor // Crossing Social and Ecological Flows byJames Murray and Shota Vashakmadze
  • Second: Fresh Hills by Matthew Rosenberg, Structural Engineering Consultant: Matt Melnyk, Production Assistants: Emmy Maruta, Robbie Eleazer
  • Third: Pivot by Yunxin Hu and Ben Smith
  • Fourth: 99 Red Balloons by Emeka Nnadi, Scott Rosin, Meaghan Hunter, Danielle Loeb, Kara McDowell, Indrajit Mitra, Narges Ayat and Denis Fleury

Check out the projects after the break!