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Something Old, Something New Suggestions For The Midtown Plaza Redevelopment

Midtown Plaza

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Suggestions for the redevelopment of the downtown mall in Rochester, NY. Includes perspective "renderings" of the proposed office tower that was later removed from the plan.

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Something Old, Something NewSuggestions For The Midtown Plaza Redevelopment

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"Let's combine the useful with the beautiful.""It is again in character of our times that the place for such is very rarely

to be found."

Victor Gruen

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“Victor Gruen designed this project before I joined his

firm, but I know he was very proud of it.”

“... his contributions and his reputation are being revived

today and they are considered of great importance to

American city planning.”

Cesar Pelli

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“The plaza has taken over the role formerly filled by the old town square. It is not merely a place from which one may reach various offices, hotel facilities and

stores, but, beyond that it has created a climate of new opportunities for which a pent up desire obviously existed previously.”

Victor Gruen

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“What is especially interesting about the pattern of urban participation is that the activities are not concentrated, as in most downtown areas, within the eight-hour working period; cultural, social and recreational functions make the plaza an active, bustling place from early morning to late at night. A

series of choral concerts given by the St. Joseph School Choir is reported to have attracted, in all, 24,000 people.

Also … are formal balls of the Junior League of Rochester and the Winter Wonderland Dance of the University of Rochester,

as well as a large number of high school and college graduation dances.”

Victor GruenPhotograph from Victor Gruen’s book The Heart Of Our Cities

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This view of the

Midtown site

shows the

atrium (outlined in black),

the structural columns along its perimete

r (red dots) and the mall–frontage walls of the B.

Forman and

McCurdy buildings (turquoise, blue lines).

Midtown is not one building but a group of structures tied together by the “Garden Court”,or atrium, at the center.

The atrium has most of its support structure within its boundaries and should be able to stand on its own, with little need for additional columns.

Photograph from Victor Gruen’s book The Heart Of Our Cities

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A perimeter column of the atrium’s eastern boundary is visible (left), its location highlighted as a white circle in the diagram above.

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The storefronts in the atrium would becomethe perimeter walls. Weather-proofing would be needed to keep out the elements during the frigid winters and the hotsummers. Installing transparent walls would allow additional sunlight to enter the atrium by day, while giving the structure a “jewel box” appearance when illuminated from within at night. Including movable wall panels in the renovation would also make the atrium an indoor/outdoor room, possibly hosting a downtown farmer’s market in the summer.

Saving the

useful parts of Midtown will allow

it to endure

as another example of the

innovative and

civically-minded spirit of

our communi

ty

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 The “garden roof” suspended from the skylight and the slender support columns combine to give the impression of flower stems or tree trunks, drawing the eye upward,

emphasizing the spaciousness and lightness of the room; bringing to mind Frank Lloyd Wright’s S.C.Johnson

Company headquarters in Racine, Wisconsin.  

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“ It has become a cause of civic pride, the place where one takes visitors from out of town.”

Victor Gruen

“It would be a terrible thing if the "Garden Court" were destroyed.”Cesar Pelli

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A cross section of the atrium, tower and garage from Victor Gruen’s book The Heart Of Our Cities

Paetec plans to build a tower of about thirty floors on the North side of the site. The tower will be connected to a shorter building by an

atrium.

Paetec could reface and reuse the Hotel/Office tower to create a services/gym/apartment facility.

Floors could be removed from the tower and the mechanical equipment moved to its new roof, making it a low rise structure, if

desired.

The atrium is already built , paid for and on the Broad St. side of the site. It could be used by Paetec as the lobby/common area of the

complex with a “green” or garden roof.

The asbestos must first be removed regardless of the final plan. Reusing the tower and atrium will save the skyway hub, along with the garage and ramp system below the complex (which also serves

the Chase Tower, among others). The complex should be brought up to “LEED” standards.

 In New York City, many towers of the “international style” of mid-

twentieth century commercial architecture have been updated through a complete re-skinning of the exteriors, along with the

modernization of the building’s mechanical and IT systems.  

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Mutual of America Life Insurance Company retained Swanke Hayden Connell to assist the company in its search for a new world headquarters.

After considering numerous suburban locations the decision was made to purchase an obsolete 32 year old, 34 story, 626,000 sf office tower on Park Avenue and to redesign the exterior and interior core of the building into a first-class, state-of-the-art facility.

A cost benefit analysis was prepared considering the options of retrofitting the existing system and replacing it with a new energy efficient curtain wall.

The economics and long term investment favored a new system.

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Objectives:

- Extend the life of the building by retaining the basic structural frame. - Upgrade all building systems; improve efficiency and reliability. - Design a new state of the art curtain wall façade- Reconfigure core; increase

the rentable area.- Redesign lobby to provide

for greater security and control.- Expand support and loading areas. - Reconstruct building with retail tenants in place without a loss of revenue.- Keep final construction cost

within the client’s initial budget.

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Established a technologically progressive illustration of client’s corporate culture. Identifiable

profile on the skyline

BOMA 1996 Modernization AwardBOMA 1996/97 New Construction Building of NY Award

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from SE (Indian Hill)from SW ( Corn Hill)

from South (Ford St. Bridge)

arrow = proposed site of paetec tower

from SE (Cobbs Hill)

If the tower is placed at the northern end of the garden court/atrium, instead of the site

of Midtown Tower, it would benefit from unobstructed views.

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N

The diagram at center illustrates where the tower might be placed; at the NE or NW corner of the atrium.

Isolating and offsetting the tower from the main cluster of skyscrapers (at Clinton and Broad streets) will not only provide tenants with inspirational views, but will also fittingly assert the new tower ‘s

dominance of the Rochester skyline.

from West (Troup St.) from North (Central Ave.).

from NE (BayRd.)from NE (Kelly Rd.)

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"Problems almost as big as the

building itself stood

in the way of preservation; but it is the

shame of...it’s

financial and cultural

communities, it’s

politicians, philanthropi

sts and planners,

and of the public as

well that no serious

effort was made..."

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"...A rich and powerful city, noted for its resources of brains, imagination and money, could not rise to the occasion.“"Farewell to Penn Station“ editorial, New York Times (10/30/1963)

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“Vacant and derelict for years, its heritage partially forgotten and its fate uncertain, Rochester’s Old Federal Building faced dubious prospects in 1975 when the Federal Government’s General Services Administration offered it to the city for $1…it was veteran of nearly 100 years in community service. With careful planning and hard work it could serve Rochester for a century more. In

1988, a decade after renovation, that vision has proven to be reality. The “new” City Hall already surpasses the structure’s past prominence…as a

community resource and showplace, as a living monument to civic roots and as a symbol of city-wide renaissance and renewal.”

10th Anniversary City Hall Guidebook

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The grand and sturdy “old” Federal Building of 1875 was once considered obsolete and faced demolition. Due to the preservation efforts of our community it was instead restored, expanded and re- used as our majestic “new” City Hall. All this was accomplished at a lower cost than an entirely new building. Although it too is (almost) empty and seems obsolete, Midtown may one day be regarded with the same historical reverence as Rochester’s Richardsonian headquarters. Is it true that thirty years later we can no longer afford the preservation of our historic architecture? Are we so desperate to revitalize the city core that we must destroy a part of our urban history to accomplish it?

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"...we will probably be

judged not by the

monuments we build…

...but by those we

have destroyed

..."

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"...Any city gets what it admires, will pay for, and, ultimately, deserves..."

"...The final indictment is the values of our society."

- "Farewell to Penn Station"

editorial, New York Times (10/30/1963)

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“It would be a terrible thing if the "Garden Court" were destroyed.”Cesar Pelli

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"The scenario relies less on heroes and villains than on increasing awareness of urban quality, a tough, sophisticated faith and sustained cooperative effort. In the end, all of the participants are the good guys. Who

could ask for anything more?"

Ada Louise Huxtable

2008 RRCDC

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This presentation and all illustrations herein not otherwise credited and/or in the public domain: copyright © 2007, 2008, 2011 by Daniel J. Palmer

([email protected])

Other resources available upon request.

Thanks to: ULI, RRCDC and RDDC for ideas, information and inspirationSpecial Thanks to: Cesar Pelli for his encouragement and quotes on Midtown Plaza, Carol Giffen and Richard

Hayden of Swanke Hayden Connell, for information on and photos of their renovation of 320 Park Ave in New York City.