
The big pending question, it seems, is whether the Atlantic Yards arena (right) would be more like the significantly glass-walled Prudential Center in Newark, where streets were closed for security reasons, or mostly-concrete Madison Square Garden (below, 31st Street at 8th Avenue), around which streets haven't been closed--though that's not quite so.
Bottom line: There seems to be enough glass in the Atlantic Yards plan to raise concerns similar to those in Newark. Does that portend a change in design?
Guest host David Cruz offered a slightly off-key opening: Despite some lingering opposition from community members, the Atlantic Yards project has gotten its approval. You can already see some of the work sites being prepped. So things are moving right along, right? Well, not completely it turns out. The Atlantic Yards project might not be the done deal that many of us think it is. There have been some new developments in the project, and in the lawsuit brought against developer Bruce Ratner.
Well, not quite. The lawsuits are still pending, as Kuntzman noted in response, and the current controversy concerns security. Kuntzman also pointed out the shifting market for luxury housing.
Security concerns a fishing expedition?
DC: So Errol, what is your sense of where the opposition is in this right now?

(At right, a rendering of the AY arena from Flatbush Avenue.)
Actually, the security issue, well beyond the question of arena setbacks, was first raised in a 7/22/05 White Paper, and the security issue was raised earlier this year in the pending challenge to the state's environmental review.
(But he still makes some of the same arguments in his column today.)
Eminent domain
Cruz asked about the status of pending lawsuits.
(Right, the corner of MSG at 31st Street and 8th Avenue)
GK: The eminent domain lawsuitā¦ weāre waiting for the three-judge panel to issue to issue a ruling. There are some substantive issues related to whether the Empire State Development Corporation did it backwards.... It is legal, thanks to the Supreme Court Kelo [v. New London] decision, to condemn property for a private developer. What's still in question even in Kelo and obviously before the federal appeals panel is whether the state can do that knowing who the developer is, or whether the state needs to first declare the area in need of--to have its blight be remedied, and then find a developer after issuing an RFP or something like that... It seems clear that Bruce Ratner actually knew which properties he wanted to condemn before he had his approval. So there's a question about whether he did that the right way.
Actually, Kelo merely reaffirmed settled law, but also brought it to much public attention.
EL: To round that out a little bit, when the case... went to federal court, it was struck down as having no merit. So it's on appeal to see whether it can really get started.
Kuntzman called that a simplification, and Louis disagreed. Yes, U.S. District Judge Nicholas Garaufis dismissed the case, but he also neglected to address what plaintiffs consider crucial issues of sequence.
Arena security issues
Cruz asked about problems with the location of the arena.

It hasn't been plucked out of thin air; it was revealed belatedly by the developer two weeks ago.
EL: I work a couple of blocks from Penn Station, from Madison Square Garden, and anybody who comes up 8th Avenue can see that itās not uncommon, or at least it hasn't been found deadly, to have the wall of an arena next to an active street. The notion that a security check wasn't done adequately... is really just one more version of trying to slow the process down and delay the process enough to kill it.
Glass v. concrete
But doesn't it depend on the composition of the wall of the arena? The wall of Madison Square Garden flush against 8th Avenue is concrete (right), while there is glass farther away from the street at the corners of 31st and 33rd streets. At this point, much of the Atlantic Yards arena would be glass (below), much like the Prudential Center, though only a portion of the Atlantic Yards arena would be near the street.
That poses a different challenge and raises the question of whether the arena is being redesigned.
Also, the Madison Square Garden situation is more complicated. According to the Brooklyn Downtown Star:
That street also went under a glass-walled passageway--clearly a security risk.
Kuntzman's response
GK: Errol makes a couple of good points... I donāt think 20 feet from the sidewalk to the glass wall is plucked out of thin air. That is an actual fact that Forest City Ratner and ESDC did try to conceal for a long time... Is this an attempt to grasp at straws, perhaps, but there is a fact on the ground in this case, in Newark, where the arena is also glass-walled, the Newark police department decided to close off streets on game night. Now that's an important development, because Flatbush Avenue and Atlantic Avenue are far busier than the streets that are against the Newark Prudential Center. These are things that, at the very least, whether you're an opponent or supporter, should have been at least disclosed and studied. If Flatbush Avenue or Atlantic Avenue need to be partially closed--

EL: I was on a panel the other day with the police director from Newark. If they were going to say tomorrow, well, y'know what, weāre going to change our opinion and open the streets... would that really change peopleās concerns about Atlantic Yards?
Kuntzman said he thinks the security issue's a red herring but still should be studied.
GK: We're not worried about Newark. What I think the opponents are talking about is why the NYPD and the ESDC have just not spoken about this. If they really do intend to not close off a lane or two of Flatbush and Atlantic, they need to be very clear about it, they haven't studied it.... Do I think itās a red herring, yeah, I do. I think that things in New York should be built, whether there's a threat of terrorism or not. Buildings like the New York Times Tower on 8th Avenue, Madison Square Garden, should be glass-walled. They look nice... Things potentially could be bombed. That said, the terror impact should be studied.
Traffic studied?
Cruz pointed out that the streets bordering the Prudential Center in Newark are not so well-traveled.
GK: It would certainly be a major difference, and that's why NYPD is saying it does not intend to do that.... The traffic issues relating to Atlantic Yards have barely been studied, and the project was approved... I donāt think, necessarily, that a jury of their peers would necessarily rule on the side of opponents, but it's something that needs to be discussed, and it just isn't.
NYPD neutral?
(Photo of the pedestrian passageway in that closed interior "street" between 31st and 33rd streets.)
GK: I don't know if I would necessarily let you get away with saying the NYPD is neutral on this, but I have no evidence to the contrary, so Iāll leave it at that.
Nor do we have evidence, but the NYPD does work for the mayor, and the mayor supports the project.
Traffic challenges
Cruz asked Kuntzman about traffic changes associated with Atlantic Yards and Louis added some personal observations.
EL: My perspective is from living about five blocks east of the eastern boundary of the entire project. Itās a pretty serious mess right now. When I have to drive in... like any sensible person who lives near the place, you just avoid that intersection altogether. You drive through Bed-Stuy, you drive through Clinton Hill.
GK: Thatās exactly what those neighborhoods are concerned about now, Errol.
EL: I've been doing that for close to 20 years now... They should've been trying to stop me before.
GK: There will be 19,000 of you and your friends on game night.
Well, no, because at least half should be taking public transit, right?
EL: Some people avoid driving through thickly trafficked areas and some people donāt.
That's an understatement.
Arena the target?
Cruz noted that Forest City Ratner considers the arena the centerpiece and oddly questioned whether it could be jettisoned as a compromise. (It's part of the architecture, and it brings huge naming rights.
GK: Thatās a bit of a Trojan Horse. The larger project, millions of square feet of office space and housing, thatās actually the project.
DC: Youāre saying that the arena is the last chip you can deal away.
GK: Youāre mischaracterizing the opposition. The opposition has been focused very clearly on opposing the larger project.... Ratner wants the opposition to focus on the arena, frankly...
EL: Wait a minute... The eminent domain lawsuit is not about the entire parcel, it's about the portion that is supposed to be taken by eminent domain, which includes the arena parcel.
Not quite. One of the major plaintiffs is Henry Weinstein, whose property is between Pacific and Dean streets east of Carlton Avenue.
Also, the lawsuit challenging the environmental review challenges the project as a whole
Spreading the wealth
Louis explained why he likes Atlantic Yards. (Here's more.)
EL: There's a lot in the project.... There are people who like it a lot because of basketball's status as a secular religion in Brooklyn. There are people like me who don't care about professional sports in general and probably would never go to a game, but like things such as the fact that it will create some jobs and it'll create a lot of housing. There's something there for everybody, and that's kind of the whole point of the project.
Well, a lot fewer jobs than originally promised. It may seem like nitpicking to point this out, but that locution--the project "will create"--obscures the mix of private and public and tax-advantaged support needed.
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