Revising perspective on Site 5 plans: 2016 proposal from developer Greenland minimized change in scale. Alternate view shows tower dwarfing bank and B1.
From Jan. 2016 Greenland Forest City presentation |
A 250-foot, 439,050-square foot tower had been approved there.
Moving the bulk from B1, dubbed "Miss Brooklyn" by original architect Frank Gehry, could create a much larger two-tower project, up to 785 feet tall and 1,142,052 square feet.
Today, that pending plan likely will be revised and expanded by Greenland USA or, perhaps, a new partner or successor.
A strategic angle
Consider that the angle Greenland chose for the renderings-- a hovercraft view looking down Flatbush Avenue somewhere northwest of the historic Williamsburgh Savings Bank tower--portrays the proposed shift in a self-serving way.
{That's putting aside the misleading use of green to designate open space like the tiled arena plaza, and the absence of the actually green Brooklyn Bear's Garden, at the tip of Site 5.)
Annotations added to presentation |
The hovercraft angle maximizes the contrast between the 512-foot bank and the 511-foot B1 tower, while minimizing the contrast between the 511-foot B1 and Site 5: first, the 800-foot potential building envelope (center) and then the 785-foot taller tower (right).
Yes, the rendering in the right panel suggests a significant contrast in scale between Site 5 and the bank building.
By portraying B1 so robustly, it suggests that moving bulk to Site 5 is no big deal. However, the Site 5 images are more than 50% taller than B1. (The images come from a presentation to the Department of City Planning.)
Another strategic angle
The below perspective, also provided in the Greenland presentation, is closer to street level. It's from Downtown Brooklyn, northwest of the project site, foregrounding the bank.
From Greenland Forest City presentation |
While it seems somewhat centered along Flatbush Avenue, the perspective leans northeast, closer to the bank building than Site 5. That allows the 512-foot bank building and 785-foot Site 5 tower appear roughly the same height. (Yes, it does suggest a contrast between B1 and Site 5.)
So we deserve a range of renderings.
An alternate view
Another strategic rendering
Some Atlantic Yards watchers may recall another strategic rendering.
Consider the angle in the image at right, from May 2006, produced by original architect Frank Gehry.
It shows the bank building dwarfing the flagship tower, though it was actually less than one-third the bulk of B1 and at that point 108 feet shorter (512 feet vs. 620 feet).That's looking south from street level along Flatbush Avenue.
So the nearest building seems the most imposing.
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