Showing posts with label Empire State Building. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Empire State Building. Show all posts

Friday, September 24, 2010

Photo Friday: Feast of San Gennaro

The Feast of San Gennaro along Mulberry Street, September 21, 2010 5:29pm. Photo by The Preservator.

This week the 85th Feast of San Gennaro is being celebrated along the length of Mott and Mulberry streets in New York City's Little Italy (Chinatown? Five Points? Two Bridges?).  The feast honors the martyrdom of San Gennaro, the Patron Saint of Naples, and has been held in Little Italy since 1926, centered around the National Shrine to San Gennaro at the Church of Most Precious Blood (just around the corner at 113 Baxter Street). The feast runs through Sunday, September 26th.  

For a full and colorful explanation of the Feast, check out this two part series from The Bowery Boys in 2007.
Part 1: Blood and Sideshows
Part 2: Most Precious Blood

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Skyline Swordfight: 15 Penn Plaza and the Empire State Building

Is the Empire State Building so spectacularly special that it warrants a 17-block buffer from other skyscrapers? Its owners, Anthony and Peter Malkin, think so.

The Malkins are in a twist about a proposed tower at 15 Penn Plaza, being developed by Vornado Realty Trust and designed by Pelli Clarke Pelli. This proposed tower would be barely shorter than the Empire State Building, though it would have a bulkier massing. The buildings would be about 900 feet apart.  Because of the size and proximity, opponents of the new 15 Penn Plaza foresee the end of largely-unobstructed views of the Empire State Building from many places in New York. The Malkins are hoping to see the proposed tower reduced in stature, if not outright rejected.
Rendering of the Empire State Building and the possible 15 Penn Plaza. via Architects Newspaper Blog here.

The Empire State Building is one of the most iconic buildings in New York, and one of the best-known and loved in America. No dispute there. It has also stood above its surroundings with little competition for the last 79 years.  The Empire State Building is a designated city landmark and a National Historic Landmark. But just because it's a landmark, and just because so many people like it or can see the way it lights up at night doesn't mean nothing similarly tall can be built nearby. Frankly, at nearly 80 years old, it is impressive that the Empire State Building has had so little competition in the skyline.

The planned tower at 15 Penn Plaza was approved by the Department of City Planning earlier this summer. City Planning also granted variances allowing the building to be constructed at a height more than double what the site's  zoning permits as-of-right. City Planning's logic is that there should be high-density development around Penn Station. (There's more of this to come as Moynihan Station materializes. Stay tuned.) It's got to also help that Vornado is promising a chunk of change for transit-related investments at the site as well. (Which, is all the Municipal Arts Society chose to offer testimony on before City Planning. Fascinating.)

Yesterday the City Council Subcommittee on Zoning and Franchises heard testimony about the proposed tower.  In all likelihood, the City Council will approve the proposed tower.

There's no special zoning overlay for the Empire State Building restricting height within a certain radius. Views of the Empire State Building's aren't exactly protected by its landmark status. And, even though the proposed new building is not particularly attractive, it's a good idea to encourage high density around the Moynihan-transit-hub-to-be.

Moreover, New York's is a changing skyline. It should stay that way.

Related Linkage:
"More Shots Fired in the Battle of the Midtown Skyline," Curbed
"Save Our Skyline, Begs Empire State Building," Architects Newspaper Blog
"A Fight on New York's Skyline" The New York Times

Friday, April 9, 2010

Photo Friday

View from Brooklyn Heights Promenade this morning,
looking northward at Bridge, Empire State Building, overlooking park construction
Posted by Picasa