Neon artwork at arena plaza will be lit 6 am-midnight, for 3+ years. No DOB permit needed. Will "You belong" apply to (oft-faulty) elevator, Hong Kong protests?
Via CityLab |
He was eager to share a friendly article from CityLab that buffed the art propect and discounted the unmet promises of the arena and larger Atlantic Yards/Pacific Park project.
(Note: CityLab still hasn't corrected the erroneous statement that Joe Tsai owns the Barclays Center. Rather, as shown in the excerpt at right, his company operates the arena. The distinction is important, because the fig leaf of public ownership enables tax-exempt bonds, saving Tsai tens of millions of dollars.)
The message also invited people to the unveiling celebration Saturday, October 23 from 4-7pm, with "free food tastings from BIPOC- and MWBE-owned businesses, musical performances, and resource tables from city agencies and local organizations."The arena’s plaza has in so many ways been Brooklyn’s home base for powerful protests for racial justice, especially in the past year. In honor of this history, and of the brave Brooklynites– and all New Yorkers– who fight to make life better for their communities, we are so excited that at this moment, award-winning Bahamian artist Tavares Strachan is installing his powerful work "You Belong Here/We Belong Here” (2021), on top of the grass subway canopy outside of Barclays Center.
March 11, 2021 |
One test, or potential irony, will be whether the arena maintains the elevator from the plaza to the mezzanine level, which has been frequently out of service, as well as the escalators, also periodically out of service.
Barclays Center Has Subway’s Worst Privately Owned Elevator, The City reported 2/10/20, functioning just 74.2% of the time in 2019, according to MTA statistics, "falling far beneath the 96.5% reliability standard aimed for by New York City Transit."
That elevator has been repaired, so presumably its performance has improved recently, but it is notoriously among the worst in the system, leading to criticism of the MTA's monitoring of such privately maintained elevators.
The most recently available MTA dashboard page, ranging from September 2020 through July 2021, shows that the elevator, designated 700X, was in service only 41.2% of the time. See screenshot below. (In June 2020, the arena claimed 92% service.)
The MTA's elevator/escalator status page states that the 700X elevator is estimated to be out of service until 3 pm this afternoon.Who belongs--Hong Kong protesters?
Another test will be whether the arena plaza without incident hosts protesters whose position run afoul of Tsai, who notoriously backed the Chinese regime in 2019 after the Houston Rockets General Manager Daryl Morey tweeted "Fight for Freedom. Stand with Hong Kong,” just before the Brooklyn Nets left for China for some lucrative exhibition games.
In his book Can't Knock the Hustle, a chronicle of the Nets' 2019-20 season, author Matt Sullivan describes how activists attending the team's first preseason home game after the China trip wore t-shirts reading STAND WITH HONG KONG and at one point, assembled multiple components to create a larger banner stating MOREY OR MONEY. He writes:
Then multiple security guards began snatching at a sign that read, of all the nonviolent things, FREE TIBET. Too big, the Barclays staffers concluded, but only after snatching hard enough that one of the activists in the front row almost fell into a railing.Sullivan also writes:
An official involved in security preparations for the game said that Joe Tsai was frustrated that his arena had a limitation only on the size, not on the content, of a protest sign.
Presumably Tsai knows better now.
The MTA told me that, while it's not MTA property, the project's backers did have to get permission via the External Partner Program, which guides public and private-sector designers and contractors through technical implementation of projects within 200 feet of an MTA property. That permission concerned the structure, not content.
"We received permission to install this specific piece of artwork from the required parties, which include ESD and the MTA," she wrote. "DOB approval and permitting was not required because the artwork qualified as signage under the Atlantic Yards Land Use Improvement and Civic Project (“MGPP”), which overrode local regulation. Instead, the work, which was fully engineered in compliance with the technical requirements of NYC Code, was approved by the MTA following a thorough review."
Yes, the ESD's Modified General Project Plan (MGPP) overrides local regulations, including:
(v) Override of signage regulations to allow arena signage to exceed the applicable height, surface area, and illumination controls on the arena block.But there's a complication here.
“ESD consented to the “You Belong Here” art exhibition and there have been no requests for other art installations or advertising campaigns. The Modified General Project Plan for the Atlantic Yards Project has previously overridden the New York City signage regulations, including those set forth in the City’s Zoning Resolution, which are therefore not applicable to the art exhibition. The “You Belong Here” art exhibition is expected to be on display for at least 3 years and will be illuminated from 6 AM to midnight, the same hours as the oculus.”
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