I saw this guy reading FT right at the southern entrance to Central Park. It seemed very much like he could focus on the paper though there were cabs speeding behind him, horses clumping by, and tourists galore. This is the beauty of NYC, after all.
12.29.2006
Reading - NYC-style
Posted by Shin-pei at 2:21 PM 0 comments
Holiday cheer
It's of course that "dead" week between holidays, which is a very lively week for the city. Now that I'm working in Midtown, I've been meaning to take photos of the new and improved Columbus Circle. I still don't much care for the Time Warner Center interior, but Columbus Circle has come alive, and that in turn has changed the "front porch" of the Time Warner building itself. There's so much activity there now - it's recaptured some of the energy from when Columbus Circle was a crossroads for many.
Happy New Year everyone!
Posted by Shin-pei at 2:13 PM 0 comments
12.18.2006
More on luxury loos
Hard to resist. This WC1 loo doesn't qualify as totally public: though anyone can pony up the 5 pounds required for use, I would bet that there are guardians that will keep out the riff-raff.
Two more are coming in 2007, with 10 total luxury water closets by the end of 2008.
Posted by Shin-pei at 12:40 PM 2 comments
Art for the public spaces
Beautiful to look at.
Falling Gardens and Volume.
BTW, we stopped by 11 Spring Street. What a scene. The exterior of the building looked beautiful, but the line wrapped around the outside and there was no way we were going to get in. Also, the poor organizer kept having to run outside and tell people to get out of the street because the show would be shut down by the police. Too bad - the building looks fantastic from the middle of and across the street.
photos from this weekend here and here and older photos here.
Posted by Shin-pei at 12:13 PM 0 comments
12.13.2006
This Place Is...
Just found this new-ish blog about "people-centered place design."
Posted by Shin-pei at 4:28 PM 0 comments
12.12.2006
TONIGHT! Green Apple Talk on the Urban Environment
It's going to be fun! Buzz Poole has written about design, music and playing cards - what else typifies our pop culture right now? Come on, admit it, you play poker (hearts, bridge) once a week with your hipster friends. If that's your community, hey, I like it. Also, read more about Alex Marshall, I especially liked his reflective pieces on how places are shaped by the way we live, which is one of the many topics the discussion will cover.
Strand Bookstore, tonight, 7PM, FREE.
Posted by Shin-pei at 12:30 PM 0 comments
12.11.2006
Number one
This month's post about public toilets generated the highest number of comments ever. There is something universal about number one, I suppose, so here's another innovation in that area to whet the appetite. Victoria, BC is investigating the potential use of night-time public urinals. Sure beats going in the phone booth, a tactic I've seen way too many times in New York.
Posted by Shin-pei at 3:47 PM 0 comments
Where the Sidewalk Ends
Portland, OR tries out "shared space" - and successfully, it seems.
Posted by Shin-pei at 3:43 PM 0 comments
Labels: streets
X marks the holidays
Readers of this blog will know that one of my favorites ways to shop is at markets. There seems to be more of them this year - actually, too many of them to go to all. On Saturday, we hit Bustcraftacular with the ambitious goal of crossing three names off our list, a goal thwarted because we were stuck in the aisles as one would be on Sixth Avenue during the Greenwich Village Halloween parade.
Rampant popularity and its implications on my own shopping experience aside, I'm just thrilled that markets have taken hold like this in New York. There are a couple of good markets or market-like settings that are ongoing through the year: The Market NYC and Edge*nyNOHO. (For some reason the holiday markets at Union Square and Bryant Park feel touristy to me.)
Now let's up the ante with street food, especially during this time of year when you are out and about in colder weather and bearing many more bags than average. Yesterday we ate our way through Chinatown: mei fun, egg rolls, hot sweet tofu, milk tea, and pastry balls, all from street or kiosk vendors. Yum! Chinatown is the only neighborhood where I find it easy to do a few courses like that.
Posted by Shin-pei at 11:21 AM 0 comments
Labels: markets
12.08.2006
Green Apple Talk: The Urban Environment
Don't just read about it: come out to meet and hear a few urbanists bat around the latest on sustainability and the urban environment next Tuesday at the Strand for the upcoming Green Apple Talk. I will be on the panel as well as Alex Marshall, author of Beneath the Metropolis: the Secret Lives of Cities and Buzz Poole, editor of Green Design. The Green Apple Talk series is hosted by best-selling author Bryan Keefer.
Green Apple Talk: The Urban Environment
The Strand
828 Broadway at 12th Street
7PM, Tuesday Dec 12
FREE
Update: In the spirit of the evening, after the panel I'm heading over to the Green Drinks holiday party. It's a full green evening.
(I've been so amiss on this blog because blogger has been so temperamental and I am going through with the re-design! hurray. Thanks for your patience with the semi-silence...)
Posted by Shin-pei at 1:23 PM 0 comments
11.28.2006
Chic public toilets
As with many public space elements, Paris trumps New York.
In Paris
In New York (image from NewMexican.com)
Posted by Shin-pei at 12:17 PM 5 comments
Identity overhaul, and a public space story
Postings have been light of late, mostly because I'm considering a small overhaul of the site, one that will hopefully steer BttN closer to my observations of public spaces. For those who are still reading, thanks for tuning in.
Yesterday, the weather was warm enough to have lunch outside. It was even warm enough to sit on a granite bench in front of a water fountain of a large office building on Sixth Avenue. There were two chicken and rice guys on both street corners, and a fruit vendor - all vendors were doing well, with a small line even after 1:30PM.
While we ate with a view overlooking the street, a homeless person decided to go coin-diving in the fountain. The weather was cooperating, I suppose. There weren't too many coins to be had, but perhaps it was also fun to be in water, especially when the sun is out.
This could have been unsettling, and maybe in a less busy downtown it would have induced some general fear if I was the only person near the fountain, but with all sorts of people bustling about, eating lunch, and the vendors "guarding" each street corner, the homeless guy attracted nary a side glance. And maybe because he didn't attract any attention at all, he waded through the fountain and was off without an incident, and a couple dollars richer, in less than a minute.
When he left, a group of young Japanese media types just finished buying their lunch from a chicken/rice vendor. Lunch in hand, they walked the perimeter of the fountain, assessing their sit-down options. By this time, most people had finished lunch and they had several empty benches to choose from. And where did they choose to cluster? Right next to me, the only other person in the area still eating lunch.
Posted by Shin-pei at 11:39 AM 0 comments
11.23.2006
Making the best of scaffolding
I like the thoughtfulness that went into this too.
Posted by Shin-pei at 8:24 PM 0 comments
11.16.2006
Two is too close for comfort
It's now been several days since I meant to post this!
A fun piece in the NYT about personal space in public spaces.
Posted by Shin-pei at 10:43 AM 0 comments
11.15.2006
New York Regional Trends 2006
The Allen Room at Jazz at Lincoln Center. Now imagine the chairs filled with dark suits; now you have a good picture of the event yesterday.
I got to attend part of yesterday's ULI New York conference on "Regional Trends 2006" in the Allen Room in the Time Warner Building - the most spectacular view ever. I got there after lunch, so missed the whole hour on transportation kicked off by Doctoroff. The session immediately following lunch was on capital markets, way over my head. But the other discussions about in-fill development in the urban core and suburban nodes and the discussion called "Industry Leaders" with representatives from Conde Nast, New York Times, Goldman Sachs and Citigroup (because they "create the environment in which we all practice" according to Michael Buckley) were really interesting.
Notably, some of the emerging themes were:
Community involvement is a winner - Everyone agreed that community involvement has become more sophisticated, and that all projects benefit from engaging communities earlier rather than later. This is not altruistic in any way; rather, it is a strategy to keep the process moving smoothly. However, it was clear that the developers were genuinely listening to the community, and they appreciated the fact that communities were better at articulating what they wanted, rather than relying on the knee-jerk adversarial approach to new development. Because of this, developers were more willing to take initiative in engaging the community much earlier in the process, rather than slogging through an outreach/approval process towards the end.
New York Market is dependent on transportation - the booming development districts for the New York region, which is "priced to perfection," will be Queens West and Midtown West, and not so farther afield Jersey City. Developers all agreed that this was largely dependent on the government's ability to build transportation, the public transit kind, as quickly as possible and in collaboration with other city agencies, community groups and private entities. Developers wished that transportation authorities would recognize their greater role in land-use, instead of looking at it from a sole-system perspective.
Transportation in New York is regional - instead of different local groups trying to defend their turf and clamoring for budget dollars in their locality, everyone agreed that all transit and transportation authorities needed to be collaborative and move beyond geo-political boundaries. The Port Authority was one entity that was specified over and over again. Transportation - essentially, connectivity - was a huge factor in determining the viability of new developments, whether residential or commercial space.
A commitment to the environment and sustainability - All developers discussed pursuing some type of sustainability goal, the leading element being any energy-saving mechanism that can be built into the program. EPA regulations are no longer scary, but still a pain in the butt, though everyone recognizes their necessity. Those who are market leaders in pioneering green building acknowledged new technologies available even as their buildings may await occupancy.
All in all, despite the initial premise centered around cap rates, I left the day much more optimistic about the state of development in New York than I have felt before. Sure, the majority of these folks are obviously out there to make a profit, but it's great that they recognize how public and community parties fit together and can benefit while they are making their buck. When you have profiteers talking to their peers about how they are on the side of "Jane Jacobs" vs. Robert Moses and how neighborhoods need to be strengthened and how energy-conservation is their number one priority, surely these are signs that the tides are turning.
Incidentally, I just noticed that ULI's blog is called "The Ground Floor." Drat. We had a project in the works called just that.
Posted by Shin-pei at 4:32 PM 0 comments
11.13.2006
Upcoming
A bunch of good events to catch, now if only there were two of me...Green Talk #1 at the Strand Bookstore explores the common ground between eating for pleasure and eating politics (Tues, Nov 14 7PM, free)...Also on Tuesday, MAS's Center for Urban Books hosts a panel, "The Humane Metropolis: People and Nature in the 21st Century" where you can catch Robert Yaro of RPA, a PPSer, NYRP, and a rising star in New York's sustainability movement, Menaka Mohan from the Sustainable South Bronx greenway project (Tues, Nov 14, 6:30 - 8PM, free, rsvp to rsvp@mas.org or 212.935.2075)...and another on Tuesday, 2005 Pritzker Prize-winner Thomas Mayne gives a free lecture at Cooper Union's Great Hall, where he will also be signing copies of Morphosis, his firm's monograph of built projects (a monograph which kept a close friend in LA busy for over a year) (Tues, Nov 14, 6:30)...and next week, yet another panel on Jane Jacobs at the MAS Center for Urban Books (Mon, Nov 20, 6:30 - 8PM, free, rsvp to rsvp@mas.org or 212.935.2075). Now I love Jane Jacobs as much as any other urban humanist, but honestly. The contrarian side of me is starting to get a bit uneasy with the mythologizing.
Posted by Shin-pei at 1:33 PM 0 comments
11.08.2006
Update on High Line
Lisa Chamberlain of Polis brings an update on the High Line, gathered while attending a luncheon hosted by the Association of Real Estate Women.
Posted by Shin-pei at 9:01 AM 0 comments
Good Information Design
In planning and design, the communication of ideas is still limited to the media at hand. That media may have gotten more snazzy, like 3-D renderings that "walk" a client through a building, but many ideas still start as a drawing. There is no direct brain wave transferral. So good drawings and layouts are imperative to building a common understanding of a situation, and is the foundation for diversity of opinion.
The one here looks just great to me, especially in how it communicates a narrative, which is how many ideas are sold now. It clearly illustrates the activity described going down to the bottom of Ground Zero, but is lighthanded. Drawing by Hannes Hater who has more examples available on his site.
via Pruned
Posted by Shin-pei at 8:37 AM 0 comments
11.07.2006
Only a click away
Conference on Sustainable Urban Design at the U.N. Headquarters...Michael Sorkin sniffs out the oil and dirt...building cities for everyone...Inga Saffron's, Philadelphia Inquirer's arch. crit., blog Skyline Online...Design Trust for Public Space's new blog...and only indirectly related, Olafur Eliasson will have a new exhibit in the windows of Louis Vuitton starting November 9 through January 7. I'll never forget his "The Weather Project" at the Tate Modern that made grey-weary Londoners simply lie down.
Images from urban75
Posted by Shin-pei at 8:58 AM 0 comments