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Atlantic Yards/Pacific Park FAQ, timeline, and infographics (pinned post)

NY Mag critic Davidson conclusorily calls 461 Dean "decent and affordable," once suggested it would be a watershed

In Will Brooklyn Finally Get a World-Class Skyline?, New York Magazine architecture critic Justin Davidson surveys the landscape, and has some side praise for the B2 modular tower:
Even the lawsuit-afflicted Pacific Park next door to Barclays Center will soon yield some decent and affordable places to live: SHoP Architectsā€™ 461 Dean Street, which sports more attitude than grace. Stacking and bolting together factory-made modules was supposed to make affordable housing cheaper and quicker to put up. Instead, construction snafus and lawsuits among builders turned the process into a nasty slog. Now the tower has defiantly announced its arrival with a faƧade of fire-engine red.
It's a wee bit conclusory to call it "decent and affordable" without acknowledging lingering clouds over the mold investigation, the limited affordability (and lack of family-sized units), and the cancellation of Forest City Ratner's ambitious plans to build the entire project via modular construction (and winding down of FC Modular).

After all, in an 11/18/11 feature headlined Less Really Is More: SHoP Architects, masters of post-boom buildability., Davidson wrote that "SHoP is staking its name on the worldā€™s tallest prefab tower."

Not so much any more. No more quotes from SHoP founder Gregg Pasquarelli such as ā€œModular construction could radically change what living in New York is like."

"Factory-made housing has a venerable but erratic pedigree," Davidson wrote at the time. Indeed.

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