(Flashback: here are fliers 1, 2, 3, & 4. A fifth flier, which I'm not sure anyone wrote about, trumpeted endorsements from New York newspapers. Update: Excerpts here.)
Two versions were distributed yesterday at the Atlantic Antic; both had the same cover, touting five benefits; on the back, one featured Nets star Vince Carter, while the other had a smiling face-painted black pre-teen in a Nets t-shirt. (I don't know how long the flier has been circulating, but Forest City Ratner has been sponsoring numerous community events.) More likely the faces of Atlantic Yards will be the well-off occupying the luxury housing (and the middle-class occupying some of the not-inexpensive subsidized housing), but they're not the audience for this brochure.)
Beyond "Jobs, Housing, and Hoops," the message now stresses environmental sustainability and neighborhood revitalization, both somewhat contentious issues. And, like its predecessors, the brochure still fails to show the scale of the project in any context. (Is that Barclays Center advertisement, which showed the imposing Miss Brooklyn and some tiny vehicles, too radioactive?)
Buildings from the top
The pages tout the 2250 rental units and at least 200 home ownership units as affordable, set at 30% of household income; unmentioned are the income ranges for eligibility and potential rents, ranges that dismayed many attendees at last year's affordable housing information session.
The flier states that "apartments will be tailored to fit families of different sizes, with units ranging from studios to three-bedrooms." Do potential renters know affordable 3BR units would be 950 square feet?, will they complain? And, if "each building will have elevators, lobby attendants, resident amenities, and stunning views of Brooklyn," who exactly would get those views?
Going green
Unmentioned is how such an acre can serve any Brooklynites beyond the 13,000 or 14,000 who might be living in Atlantic Yards. Maybe that's why the accompanying graphic provides the barest hint of buildings behind those trees.
(Below, architect Frank Gehry's rendering of the view from the Dean Street playground east of Sixth Avenue, as shown in the Atlantic Yards Final Environmental Impact Statement.)
Jobs and an arena

It merely promises, "Once built, it will continue to be an economic engine for the growing borough, creating permanent jobs that will be permanently tied to Brooklyn--including professional, administrative, creative, service and retail opportunities.
A final page promises "Brooklyn's Team & A New Community Arena," citing the events beyond basketball, and free tickets. But the "community arena," of course, would be privately owned, and the Barclays Center naming rights deal, the plethora of luxury boxes, and the opportunity to market everything, even off-season sponsorship, would benefit the developer far more than the community.
See my comment involving the challenge of understanding the proposed Atlantic Yards projectās scale made in connection with the āFuture Perfectā post for 09/30/2007 below.- (BTW: When I asked the bored seemingly dispirited young man at the middle FRC booth yesterday where he lived he said he lived in upper Manhattan.)
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