Manhattanville in West Harlem. Phase 1 South of West 125 th Street 2 District Rezoning and Project...
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Transcript of Manhattanville in West Harlem. Phase 1 South of West 125 th Street 2 District Rezoning and Project...
Manhattanville in West Harlem
Phase 1
South of West 125th Street
2District Rezoning and Project Boundaries
Total Area of Proposed Manhattanville Mixed-Use Special District
Subdistrict A – Project Area
A Cohesive Plan
3
• 17 Acres integrated into the urban fabric
• Tied together by an urban layer
• Supported by contiguous below-grade services
• A complement to other neighborhood initiatives
• Exemplifying the principles of PlaNYC
Subdistrict A – Project Area
*
•Columbia is New York City’s seventh largest non-government employer
Manhattanville adds:
•6,000 New University Jobs•On average 1,200 construction-
related jobs per year for 22 years
4Why Grow?
•Rezone to allow a wider mix of uses
•Respect the context of the neighborhood
•Enliven West 125th Street as a gateway
•Provide open spaces & ground floor uses
•Widen sidewalks and view corridors
•Prohibit walls or gates
Revitalization, Improvement, & Redevelopment
5Why Manhattanville?
17-acre Academic Mixed-Use Area that allows:
•CU to maintain role as a leading academic institution
•5 to 6 million square feet of program space
•Modern, flexible academic facilities
•An open urban campus
•Ends ad-hoc acquisitions causes friction6Why Manhattanville?
A Proposed New Campus 7
View From Above 133rd Street, Looking South 8
Illustrative Site Plan, Full Build 2030
Illustrative Plan, November 2007
DCP Recommended Modifications
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Illustrative Site Plan, 2030: Publicly Accessible Open Space 10
A THE SQUAREB SMALL SQUAREC THE GROVED EAST / WEST OPEN AREAE MIDBLOCK OPEN AREAF PUBLIC PARK
F
View North Toward Studebaker along the North-South Midblock Open Area – 50’ Clear Width 11
12Illustrative Site Plan, 2030: The Square
Illustrative View of The Square, Looking Southwest 13
Illustrative Site Plan, 2030 14
Existing Building being renovated as-of-right
Proposed New Buildings
Proposed Building Renovation
Within Subdistrict A
Transportation Infrastructure 15
Historic Heritage: Studebaker, Nash, and Prentis 16
17Historic Heritage: Sheffield Farms and West Market Diner
Sustainable Development 18
•As part of plaNYC, Columbia has signed up to be a Challenge Partner
•Selected as a pilot project for the US Green Buildings Council LEED for Neighborhood Development
•Agreed to obtain at least LEED Silver certification for all academic and residential projects
•Memo of Understanding with Environmental Defense to design control measures for construction impacts
The Urban Layer 21
Business School Mixed-use Academic Building
Mind, Brain, Behavior Research
22Illustrative Ground Floor Plan
23
12th Ave, Looking North
View of 12th Avenue, Looking North
Illustrative View of 12th Avenue, Looking North 24
Energy Center Loading Dock & Parking
Physical Education
MTA Bus Depot
Diagrammatic Illustrative Section 25
130th Street 131st Street 132nd Street
Typical Building Section with Contiguous Basement
Typical Building Section without Contiguous Basement
• Truck docks in central loading area, reached by one 30’ curb cut
• Energy boilers in adjacent, below grade coordinated efficient energy center
• Continuous, transparent active ground floor
• Shared science support below grade
• Parking below grade, reached by four curb cubs
• Truck docks in all buildings, 12-16 curb cuts in all
• Energy boilers in basement, less efficient
• Active ground floor interrupted, more opaque and reduced by truck docks
• Science support in above grade space, less efficient
• Reduced parking in conventional basements (additional curb cuts required)
Benefits of a Contiguous Deep Basement 26
27Illustrative Plan, Axonometric View Looking Northwest
Illustrative Plan, June 2007
28Illustrative Plan, Axonometric View Looking Northwest
Illustrative Plan, November 2007
Illustrative Site Plan, Phase 1 - 2015
Illustrative Plan: Phase I – 2015
Site 1: Academic: School of the
Arts, ColumbiaBusiness School and JL
Greene Center
Site 2: Jerome L. Greene Center for Mind, Brain, Behavior
Site 3: Academic: Columbia
Business School and School of the Arts
Site 4: Columbia Business School
Site 7: School of International & Public Affairs and University Housing
Boundary of Deep Basement Slurry Wall
29
View North Toward Studebaker along the North-South Midblock Open Area – 50’ Clear Width 30
View of West 125th Street, Looking East 31
Revitalizing West 125th Street 32
View of West 129th Street, Looking West 33
Enhancing Pedestrian Connections to Waterfront 34
35