Can the Design Guidelines suffice in the absence of arena renderings? ESDC/FCR say yes, but look at the evidence

In fact, ESDC Senior Counsel Steve Matlin pronounced the phrase "Design Guidelines" five times in a single paragraph and Forest City Ratner Executive VP MaryAnne Gilmartin also clung to the phrase.

Unlike with residential or commercial buildings, an architect explained to me, it's impossible to make design guidelines specific enough for an arena, because much about an arena can't be delineated until it's designed. For some buildings, he said, design guidelines aren't the answer.
After all, consider the differences (from top) between Frank Gehry's renderings from 2003 and 2008, and then the "placeholder" rendering this year from new arena designer Ellerbe Becket. They may all offer transparency, but they look quite different.

The question
As shown in the video below, moderator Craig Hammerman, District Manager of Community Board 6, read a long question, which he summarized: āI think the essence of the question here is: why are the renderings and other information regarding the project not being made available before next weekās public hearing?ā

The Urban Room
(Video shot by Jonathan Barkey; edited by Norman Oder)
CB 6 Chairman Richard Bashner followed up to ask about the āpublic entrance,ā an apparent reference to the Urban Room, as well as āany other general design features.ā He asked if any formerly public spaces would no longer be public.
Gilmartin responded that the Urban Room would be built when the B1 office building is built; until then, there would be an āurban plaza with many of the elements that were contemplated in the Urban Room,ā including a new transit entrance, retail, and a grand arena entrance, and āgenerous outdoor space, which will be space available to and belonging to the public.ā
(Belonging to the public? The plan has never been to have public park space but rather publicly-available space that is controlled by a nonprofit entity.)
Back to the Design Guidelines

āBut none of the spaces that were previously public spaces in nature have been changed into private spaces,ā she continued. āNone of the transparency goals and objectives of the arena design itself have been changed. None of the locations of the entrances of the arena have been changed. All of that will be honored in the alternate design.ā

Looking at the Design Guidelines

There are Envelope Plan Diagrams and Envelope Isometrics for all the buildings--except the arena--in Part 2 and Part 3 of the Design Guidelines.
As the architect commented to me, the absence of detail regarding the arena in the Design Guidelines is not an effort at deception; it's simply a recognition of the difficulty in designing such a special-purpose building.
In Part 1 of the Design Guidelines states:
i. Arena
A. Located in center of Arena Block, bounded by Buildings 1- and the Urban Room.
B. Principal entrances to the Arena shall be located through the Urban Room and on Atlantic Avenue and Dean Street.

i. Arena: Arena (including support areas), entertainment, and retail (which term shall include eating and drinking establishments.
f. Materials
iv. Arena. The street walls of the Arena along Flatbush Avenue and Atlantic Avenue shall include glass elements, including a continuous glazed area with a minimum width of 125 feet and a minimum surface area of 7500 square feet, such glazed area to commence at the height of the Arena concourse level. The street walls of ground floor retail uses located along and opening on to the street shall be glazed for a minimum of 70% of such street wall to a height of twelve feet, provided that no glazing shall be required for the sidewalk market along Atlantic Avenue described in Clause (g)(i) below.
It addresses streetscape:
Ground Floor Uses; Streetscape
i. The Atlantic Avenue and Flatbush Avenue ground floor street frontages of the Arena Block shall incorporate a variety of retail and pedestrian based activities, including retail space accessible to the street and pedestrian seating areas. Not less than 40% of the Atlantic Avenue, 15% of the Flatbush Avenue street frontages, shall be devoted to retail uses, which may include eating and drinking establishments. The Atlantic Avenue retail requirement shall include retail use in front of the Arena volume which may include a sidewalk market opening on the street, provided that the market shall not occupy more than 180 linear feet of the Atlantic Avenue frontage. The Flatbush Avenue Street frontage shall incorporate a sitting area with a minimum length of 150 feet of which 40% may be in conjunction with an adjoining retail use.
It also deals with signage:
C. Arena. Signage shall be permitted on the Arena street wall consistent with the following controls:
1. Maximum Surface Area: 100% of the Arena Signage Zone
2. Maximum Height: 40 feet
3. Transparent Signage: Signage in the Arena Signage Zone shall be constructed so that it is sufficiently transparent to make activity within the building and the interior architecture visible to passersby, and the surrounding exterior architecture and activity is visible to people on the interior.
Ground Floor Retail. In addition and notwithstanding the above controls, signage for ground floor retail shall be permitted as follows:
a. Surface Area. Signage for each ground floor establishment shall be limited to the lesser of (x) 150 square feet and (y) 3 times the linear frontage of the street wall of such retail establishment.
b. Illumination. Fixed illumination shall be permitted for such signage.
c. Height. Signage for ground floor retail establishments shall be limited to a maximum height of 25 feet above the adjoining grade.
The guidelines also discuss height:
V. Arena Block
Height, Setback, Envelope, and Architectural Controls ā Individual Buildings
a. Arena
i. Maximum Building Height: 150 feet
ii. Setbacks: The Arena may rise without setback to the maximum building height.
iii. Architectural Controls: The Arena faƧade shall include transparent elements in the Atlantic Avenue and Flatbush Avenue street walls allowing for views into the arena concourse from the adjoining sidewalks.
DCP comments in 2006
A 9/27/06 letter from the City Planning Commission stated:
Under the Design Guidelines, the arena block, located between Atlantic Avenue, Flatbush Avenue and Sixth Avenue, will be designed with a new, state-of-the-art arena as its centerpiece, surrounded by four towers. Building 1ās distinctive architectural profile will contain an exterior clad in sculptural panels of glass and metal, and provide a distinct visual relationship with the Williamsburgh Savings Bank to the west. Height limits are established for each tower as well as detailed envelope controls. The arenaās design will include maximum glazing to allow views into the arenaās circulation space and the āarena bowlā, emphasizing the importance of its location. The Urban Room will be located at the apex of Atlantic and Flatbush avenues, enhancing the projectās iconic status and providing direct links to the mass transit hub below ground. The Design Guidelines for the arena block also include provisions governing the streetscape that will enhance the pedestrian environment by providing widened sidewalks, specifying the locations of ground-floor retail and encouraging the maximum amount of retail and glazing possible. The Design Guidelines also provide for arena event-related signage which will activate the Arena block facades in specified zones along Atlantic and Flatbush Avenues with illuminated non-advertising signs. Signage along Dean Street and Sixth Avenue will be limited to local neighborhood retail signage.
The Commission notes that the ESDC and the developers, in consultation with DCP staff, continue to refine the streetscape provisions of the Design Guidelines to better ensure that the ground floors of the Project would be active and vibrant. On the Arena Block, these changes have ensured that a maximum amount of retail will be provided. They include a 180-foot āsidewalk marketā along Atlantic Avenue, and requirements that 70 percent of the ground floor along the Sixth Avenue frontage, and 30 percent of the Dean Street frontage be devoted to retail. In addition, a minimum of 70 percent glazing requirement up to a height of 12 feet would apply to all of the ground floor retail uses, except the sidewalk retail market. Increased glazing will also be required for the area of the Arena above the concourse level.
(Emphases added)
So DCP mentioned windows and retail. That doesn't give us much to work with.
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