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Selasa, 21 Mei 2013

Barclays Center racks up awards; judge says "no one wanted to touch" scale issue of housing "because it's not built yet"

The Daily News (which sponsors the arena plaza) reports Barclays Center among Brooklyn's newest architectural standouts honored by Chamber of Commerce: The arena, home to the NBA's Nets, wins "Building Brooklyn" award for economic development. Other winners include Williamsburg's Wythe Hotel and the Botanic Garden's Vistor Center:
The Barclays Center — reviled by many during development, championed by many more, and filled by hundreds of thousands of screaming fans during its debut season — has won top honors for economic development in the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce’s annual “Building Brooklyn” awards to be announced Tuesday, the Daily News has learned.
“There isn’t a city in the world that wouldn’t beg for Barclays Center,” Chamber President Carlo Scisurra said. “It’s in the hundreds of millions of dollars what that means to the borough annually.”
I think it's hundreds of millions of dollars for the operators, not the borough.

What about the scale?

The newspaper reports:
“The impact of architecture on society and its impact is either ignored, not known, or a very subconscious thing,” said Brooklyn architect Walter Maffei, a jury member. “The discussions became heated when we got into how exactly these buildings affect their surroundings. Everyone has an opinion on that.”
And the Barclays decision?
“All the judges agreed overwhelmingly that Barclays Center is a world-class building and economic engine,” Maffei said. “The idea that the housing aspect was out of scale was ignored. No one wanted to touch it at this time because it’s not built yet.”
But aren't there models? And don't the jurors know that the plaza view of the arena was never planned, because a tower over 510 feet is supposed to be built, and the jobs inside were crucial to the cost-benefit analysis?

An award from Architizer

Architizer, an online architecture database, reported 5/17/13, Go Brooklyn: SHoP Architects’ Barclays Center Wins Architizer A+ Building Of the Year Award:
Having garnered the most Popular Choice votes among all of the Architizer A+ awards entries, SHoP Architects was presented the Building of the Year award by Barclays Center and Brooklyn Nets CEO Bret Yormak at Thursday evening’s Architizer A+ Awards Gala.
“It’s impossible to describe the thrill of seeing a building you drew sitting in the heart of Brooklyn and filled with 18,000 screaming fans,” said SHoP Architects’ Chris Sharples & Jonathan L. Mallie. “Brett and Forest City Ratner are special. Clients with vision and a belief in the power of architecture. No good building gets built without that kind of support.”
“That’s why this award that celebrates breaking architecture out of the echo chamber is such an honor to win. This building is designed for every sports fan, every concert goer, every commuter that passes by the Center every day,” said the designers. Indeed, SHoP Architects are living their Multifesto: “Redefine Design Practice.”


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Minggu, 02 Desember 2012

Fortune loves the arena, but gets transparency wrong; Jay-Z named #50 in list of top business people of 2012

From Joshua Cooper Ramo in Fortune, Globalism goes backward:
In our age we can actually see the inside pushing to the fore. Consider the design of the Barclays Center in Brooklyn; critics call it the most important new building in the U.S. this year. It was conceived around a revolutionary inside-to-out gambit, with huge windows and screens that let passersby see who is singing, dunking, or practicing inside. The building marks a generational lurch as much as a structural one: Developer Bruce Ratner craftily swapped a too expensive concept by Frank Gehry, whose elegant and impenetrable façades were perhaps the best examples of the "outside is the new outside" revolution of 20 years ago, for one by the post-boomer collective firm SHoP. In the process, almost by accident, he built what may be the first great building of the Inside Age.
My comment:
Regarding the Barclays Center, there's no "generational lurch." Gehry's own design guidelines required transparency of the facade.
Rest assured, you can barely see the scoreboard, much less see inside.
That said, those walking around the arena's upper floors can see outside.
The key to SHoP's design was not trading an impenetrable facade for transparency, but rather grafting a pre-rusted metal skin on a somewhat pedestrian arena design (think Conseco Fieldhouse) by Ellerbe Becket.
About Jay-Z

In the same issue, Fortune names Shawn Carter (Jay-Z) 50th in a list of top business people of 2012:
The man known as Jay-z owns less than 1% of the Brooklyn Nets (Russian billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov owns 80% of the basketball team), but Carter is the face of the team, and by extension, of his home borough. The rapper put in a mere $1 million into the initial partnership, but by all accounts was deeply involved in every aspect of the Nets' Brooklyn launch, including elements of its home stadium, the Barclays Center. The Nets are the latest addition to a business empire that includes New York's storied 40/40 Club and Roc-A-Fella Records. (He sold his clothing line, Rocawear, to Iconix in 2007 for $204 million.) Jay-Z the rapper may be winding down his career, but Shawn Carter the businessman is truly heating up after a fiery 2012.
The House that Hova Built or the House that Hova Hyped?


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Rabu, 03 Oktober 2012

Architect's Newspaper: SHoP confirms that first Atlantic Yards tower would be modular (updated: maybe not)

From the Architect's Newspaper, GOING MOD: Atlantic Yards is bringing the tallest modular construction building in the world to Brooklyn:
While the ribbon cutting was pro forma, “Cousin Brucy”—Markowitz’s pet name for Ratner—did invite everyone back for a groundbreaking ceremony on December 18. While he gave no details, SHoP confirmed that this was the public announcement that FCRC had, in fact, decided to move forward with modular construction for the first residential building, B2, the 32-story residential building that will be the first of 14 planned residential buildings.
Forest City hasn't said anything, so presumably they're waiting to make a big announcement about their modular plans.

(Update: According to Curbed, Forest City is still undecided.)

Another rave review

Also see the newspaper's review of the arena, SHOP REDEEMS RATNER: Innovative and intelligent architecture and public space mark a hopeful start for the controversial Atlantic Yards project:
Nestled in the roaring wedge of traffic between Atlantic and Flatbush avenues, the building’s curving forms and lateral banding reference the energy from the rushing traffic, turning a negative urban condition into an architectural expression. Even with all the traffic, the area is bordered by vibrant, high-density neighborhoods, which will help fill the spaces created by the arena’s new public realm. The generous plaza in front—a privately owned public space—helps define the larger area, and the sidewalks alongside the area, lined with street trees and steel bollards, feel far safer and more welcoming to pedestrians than they ever did before. Stadiums and arenas are often deadly to street life, but the architects of the Barclays Center have filled much of the ground floor with glass storefronts and windows into the interior....

The richly tactile, weathered steel panels, according to SHoP partner Gregg Pasquarelli, are meant to evoke the “grit and glamour” of Brooklyn. That may be a stretch, but the intricate pattern and heavy materiality of the panels signal a level of seriousness and investment on the part of the developers toward the borough.
The reviewer calls the interior "comparatively conventional."

I still think a visit to the operating arena would have added important texture.


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Selasa, 02 Oktober 2012

Barclays Center architects on WNYC: "Any time you push the boundaries... you expect to get a little friction"

WNYC's The Brian Lehrer Show today offered Barclays Center Architects:
The new Nets arena in Brooklyn is drawing a range of reviews. Architects Gregg Pasquarelli and Chris Sharples of SHoP discuss their design of the Barclays Center and how it fared on its first weekend open for business.
"Let's keep our conversation to the arena's design," Lehrer said, and callers did so, though commenters on the web site added extensive (and negative) comments about the overall project.

Callers, however, were mixed, with one--surely warming the architects' heart--saying he opposed the project but found himself liking the building.

What's the metaphor?

Lehrer, noting that people have linked the arena to a whale, or a George Foreman Grill, asked what they thought.



"I think we like "the clam, the really angry clam," Sharples responded.

"You have to think about how you break down the scale," Pasquarelli elaborated. "We're excited it's a cutting edge piece of architecture that's getting people talking about buildings." (This sounded like a bit of a mantra.)

Competing reviews

Lehrer cited Alexandra Lange's New Yorker review that called the arena "an alien presence" and Justin Davidson's New York magazine review that said "the arena lies relatively low on the skyline." How to  explain that?

"Any time you push the boundaries... you expect to get a little friction," Pasquarelli responded, "and that's exciting. We love the fact that the building can be read in multiple ways."

Rust = neglect?

The first caller said he didn't mind the building's size and color, but suggested the rust evokes decay and neglect."

"We really saw this building--it had to have some attitude," Sharples said. "We really believe it had to be made out of a natural material, something that would patina... I mean, Brooklyn has attitude, it built battleships and aircraft carriers... it was a manufacturing town... we feel this building sort of responds to the history, and also looks toward the future."

And also relies on land where renovated industrial buildings were demolished.

"It's already pre-rusted," Pasquarelli added. "We felt that to do a building that's kind of painted color would make it more like a shopping mall. If we made it stainless steel, it would feel like it's in LA. If we covered it granite, it would be like a Manhattan bank. For us, it was about this mix of grit and glamor that we think Brooklyn is really about."

Feeling of pride

A caller, "Nick in Windsor Terrace," described himself as "deeply, deeply opposed to the whole thing, still am, probably won't buy a ticket for a long while. I thought it was ugly... other night, I saw it all lit up... and I got it, and felt this weird sense of pride having it in my neighborhood."

Not quite his neighborhood, but everyone's allowed their feelings.

"Well, that's really exciting to us," Pasquarelli said. "We feel like it's going to continue engage the neighborhood.. as the housing built, I think the entire city will understand how it works as a composition, where you'll have retail around the block, residential--it will really come to life.""

Working as an ensemble

Michael D. D. White asked how much of roof is expected to remain if and when the residential buildings are built.

"There are residential building that will go around the arena. In a way, they became the backdrop, and the first one... is going to start in December," Sharples said.

"It remains to be seen... how many buildings and what scale actually will end up.. how much of design of the building has to do with what you expected to be coming rather than what's already there.?"

"The original design, the Frank Gehry plan, integrated the arena into the base of four buildings," Pasquarelli responded. "When they couldn't finance those buildings... the design had to change to a standalone structure... So we worked very closely with AECOM.. did all the exterior, and all the interior design, working in conjunction with them... it was about making the transition from a building that was completely hidden to a standalone object, with the composition of the three residential buildings as the backdrop buildings behind it... the facade you see now, the halo, the bands, they will remain when the residential buildings go in, and you will always be able to see them, but the composition will change."

The inside

Lehrer asked if the architects were constrained by commercial demands such as luxury boxes, vendors, and Jay-Z's 40/40 club

"We didn't feel we were constrained at all," Sharples responded. "What was really important to us is... the way it connects itself to the streets itself... when you come out of the transit hub, you can see right into the building, into the bowl, and see the scoreboard... we wanted that direct connection between the pedestrian on the street right into the main concourses."

Lehrer asked about the bathroom ratio. Sharples confirmed there are "more bathroom fixtures in the women's rooms than men's rooms."

The sidewalk and the street

Another caller cited "a tremendous amount of activity" outside the VIP section on the Atlantic Avenue site, and suggested the sidewalks couldn't accommodate it.

Lehrer then cited reports that, after the concert,  the flood of people headed across the street forced police to shut down Atlantic Avenue for ten minutes. "Are there problems with sidewalk design overall?"

"No," responded Sharples, ignoring the second question. "The goal was to privilege the main entry to the plaza. That's why we pushed the VIP entrance to the side. The other thing that's important, what separates VIP from the main lobby is the practice court... so people from the street can look in and see that.

Closing: nickname

"Lots of stadiums have cool nicknames," Lehrer said. "Have you thought about a nickname, maybe the Big Debit Card or the Foreman on Flatbush?"

"We'll see what happens in the coming years, with the Nets, who are going to be a fantastic team, with current ownership," Pasquarelli said. "Maybe we'll call it--the oculus is the rim."

"Or the Swoosh," added Sharples.

Added one commenter: Libor Center; Greed Center; Should Have Built on My Mall Center; $300 "affordable housing" tickets for Barbra; The House that Our Subsidies Built; 99 Problems and the 47% Gets all of 'em.

Unanswered questions

One commenter asked:
Could you please ask the architects about the Barclay logo and name on their building. Did they have a say on how and where it would be placed?
I posted a comment:
What do the architects think about the mid-block Atlantic Avenue exit, which has led to crowds spilling into Atlantic Avenue after events and crossing in the middle of the street, forcing police to shut down the street for 10 minutes or so.
Was that crowd behavior anticipated? Should there be a new crosswalk/light? Any other fix? What about after weekend afternoon events, when traffic is heavier and traffic diversion more problematic.?


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