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Thread: 7 World Trade Center - by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill

  1. #1021
    Disgruntled Optimist lofter1's Avatar
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    If you're gonna build a box this is one great way to do it.

  2. #1022

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    The neighbor looks a bit out of plumb.

  3. #1023

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    Keystoning, usually from tilting the camera up (in this case) or down.

  4. #1024

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    NYPOST:

    So, how solid is the presumed deal for Beijing-based Vantone Co. to lease 200,000 square feet at the top of Larry Silverstein's 7 World Trade Center?

    Last week, both sides announced a term sheet had been signed. It's rare to hold a press conference to announce a term sheet, which is non-binding.

    Vantone's broker, Jones Lang LaSalle honcho Peter Riguardi, said: "We have an extremely detailed letter of intent. I think both teams, us for Vantone and CB Richard Ellis for Silverstein, are very experienced and professional. We feel confident we can get through this."

  5. #1025

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    Term sheets can be either binding or non-binding under New York law. It depends on a lot of things, most importantly the wording of the document.

  6. #1026
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    A peek at the plaza design in front of 7 WTC

  7. #1027
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    That refinished plaza will actually help this area alot. I hope it is a landscaped plaza and not all cement, maybe a fountain or something to give the area more life.

  8. #1028

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    Keep in mind that it will be TINY. Probably enough room for maybe 4 benches. I think people will be drawn to the memorial park or Liberty park while this triangle of land will sit abandoned.

  9. #1029

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jake
    Keep in mind that it will be TINY. Probably enough room for maybe 4 benches. I think people will be drawn to the memorial park or Liberty park while this triangle of land will sit abandoned.
    If thats the case, this plaza will naturally attract residents as compared to tourists.

  10. #1030

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jake
    Keep in mind that it will be TINY. Probably enough room for maybe 4 benches. I think people will be drawn to the memorial park or Liberty park while this triangle of land will sit abandoned.
    I don't think so.

    North to south, it's one block long, so at least 200 ft. I've walked past there east to west many times, and I'd guess the distance from Greenwich to West Broadway is at least 100 ft. According to plans, this section of Greenwich St will not be open to traffic, so the effect of the plaza will extend up to 7 WTC.

    I agree this will not be a spot for tourists, but I don't think it will be abandoned. Workers from the post office building and 7 WTC will use it.

  11. #1031
    Disgruntled Optimist lofter1's Avatar
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    It is a fairly good size --- with lots of plumbing for the fountain, as well as large planted sections at both the north and south ends.

    At the center is a large circular area where the fountain will be...

    More pictures (click on "slideshow"): http://www.lowermanhattan.info/const...nter_75464.asp


  12. #1032
    Build the Tower Verre antinimby's Avatar
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    I'm usually not a fan of too many little parks and plazas here and there, but even I believe this one here is good. It provides a good contrast (greenery, water, life) vs. the building's base (dark, stark, lifeless). This is a good feng shui solution to a bad base design. For even better results, they should encircle the whole building's base with plant life.

  13. #1033

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    Designer brings light to Downtown projects


    Downtown Express photo by Ramin Talaie

    Architect James Carpenter in his Tribeca studio with a model of his art design for the Museum of Jewish Heritage which will open in April. His lighting design for the base of 7 World Trade Center will also soon be visible.

    By Ronda Kaysen

    Whoever said a six-story Con Edison substation couldn’t be pretty? The boxy structure that makes up the base of 7 World Trade Center will come to life next month, dazzling passersby with shimmering light emanating from within and cascading in from the outside. Yes, that’s right, a mammoth substation will be something other than an eyesore.

    Architect and sculptor James Carpenter has transformed the clunky base of the David Childs-designed glass tower into an airy wonder of light that will bring color to the streetscape.

    “The results are going to be spectacular,” developer Larry Silverstein, who owns 7 W.T.C., told Downtown Express in a telephone interview.

    The 10 transformers housed inside the tower need air to breathe, and so 7’s base is a porous series of prism-shaped slats set at varying angles, letting natural light in that bounces off interior prisms and returns to the street. At night, L.E.D. lighting mounted inside the structure will bounce off the prisms and out onto the street. Sensory cameras will pick up movement off the street and periodically reflect it as well. The result will be a moving stream of light and color that shifts throughout the day and a permeable building that hides the transformers from the naked eye.

    “We needed to come up with a way of balancing daylight with artificial light,” said Carpenter, sitting inside James Carpenter Design Associates’ Hudson St. studio. The light display will be visible along the northern and southern facades of the building. The south faces Vesey St. and the Trade Center site. The north side faces Barclay St. The light will not dominate the street, said Carpenter. “It’s a very subtle light. It’s very quiet.”

    Nearby residents hope Carpenter’s project will bring life back to the dreary corner of Barclay and Greenwich Sts. “I’m dying to see it. From the prototype, it looks like it’ll be fabulous,” said Community Board 1 assistant district manager Judy Duffy. “I love 7, it’s a really pretty building.”

    Duffy added that she hoped it would set a precedent for the Freedom Tower, which will have a 200-ft. tall reinforced concrete base. Silverstein said it was too soon to tell what would come of the Freedom Tower base. “We haven’t gotten to that yet,” he said. Carpenter said he had not been tapped for any other Trade Center projects.

    A 2004 Macarthur Foundation “genius award” recipient, Carpenter trained at the Rhode Island School of Design and specializes in light. Light plays a key role in the entire 52-story 7 W.T.C. building. Carpenter, who has worked with Childs’ architecture firm Skidmore Owings and Merrill since 1979, helped Childs design the tower’s skin to play with light from the sky. The surface of the glass structure absorbs light and at different angles it appears to fade into the sky itself.

    Carpenter also designed the lobby’s interior wall, which features a permanent scrolling creation by artist Jenny Holzer. In various fonts and colors, a litany of American literature will march across the security wall, visible from the street.

    “You’ll be able to feast your eyes upon American classic literature all of which will be wholesome stuff: motherhood, apple pie, the American Dream, all good stuff,” said Silverstein.

    Carpenter, a Tribeca resident, started his business in 1978 on West St., across from what was then the elevated West Side Highway. He spent eight years in Soho, and then relocated to Hudson and Beach Sts., where he has been ever since. “This is our home until we drop,” he said. He is at work on two other Downtown projects to bring light and color to a neighborhood with narrow, crowded streets often darkened by looming office towers.

    Carpenter, who worked on the Time Warner building in Columbus Circle and has been tapped for Moynihan Station, is teaming with architect Grimshaw to bring light into the new Fulton Transit Center. Light from the above-grade glass dome will reflect down into the subterranean levels, bringing daylight into the subterranean levels of the Lower Manhattan subway.

    “How do you make people aware of their surroundings?” said Carpenter, adding that although the transit center was scaled back last year, it will still be infused with light.

    Over on the western edge of Lower Manhattan, Carpenter is designing a purely aesthetic project—a permanent installation at the Museum of Jewish Heritage: A Living Memorial to the Holocaust. Another light project designed with L.E.D. light and an overlay of glass, the project is designed to play off the natural light of the New York Harbor. Several cameras will replay images of the harbor through the L.E.D., creating a dissonant effect. When the L.E.D. is filtered through glass, a live image of the harbor becomes clear to the viewer. “You have this opportunity to see the harbor and this way of looking at it and interpreting it,” said Carpenter. “It’s really about trying to make people more aware of the unique conditions of light.”

    The project will open in April and be placed on the bridge that connects the original 1997 museum with the addition, which was completed in 2003. The only permanent Andrew Goldsworthy installation in the city, Garden of Stones, lies directly beneath the bridge.

    The Carpenter project is “bringing the harbor into the museum,” said Ivy Barsky, deputy director of the museum. “His work is so poetic and beautiful and it’s such an interesting blending of light and space and time. It’s kind of cool that the visitor is going to be in between the core exhibition and the temporary exhibition and have time to be aware of his or her surroundings of the water and the air and the sky.”

    Ronda@DowntownExpress.com

    Downtown Express is published by
    Community Media LLC.
    Downtown Express | 487 Greenwich St., Suite 6A | New York, NY 10013

  14. #1034

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    The most interesting bit from the article.
    Duffy added that she hoped it would set a precedent for the Freedom Tower, which will have a 200-ft. tall reinforced concrete base. Silverstein said it was too soon to tell what would come of the Freedom Tower base. “We haven’t gotten to that yet,” he said.

  15. #1035
    Forum Veteran MidtownGuy's Avatar
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    Parks and plazas "here and there" are part of what make a city LIVEABLE and attractive, and form a major part of the image of a city that lingers in the minds of both residents and tourists. Pocket parks here and there provide pleasant places to have lunch , read a book, and socialize, not to mention OXYGEN. They can soften a city. For many workers cramped in cubicles, they are an oasis in the middle of the day.
    Saying you don't like parks and plazas here and there is puzzling, maybe you could explain this a litttle?

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