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August 20, 2008

MAS Floats Plans to Preserve Admiral's Row & Build Market

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Earlier today, the Municipal Art Society presented six different plans to the U.S. National Guard that would allow for both the preservation of Admiral's Row (which includes 10 19th-century houses and a timber shed from the 1830s) and the creation of a new supermarket and additional retail and industrial space; the plans also call for more green and community space than the Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corp's current proposal. “BNYDC’s plan calls for a sea of nearly 400 parking spaces in the fashion of the suburban-style supermarket model," said MAS's Lisa Kersavage. "By contrast, MAS’s alternative plans show that by reconfiguring or even reducing the parking and shifting the location of the new buildings, a greener and more pedestrian-friendly site can be achieved.”

From the MAS press release:

In the MAS alternative, the historic houses along Flushing Street are retained and are used on their ground floor as retail to encourage pedestrians to walk between the houses into a central green space. Additions connecting the upper floors in the rear of the historic buildings could enable them to be used as a business incubator or startup business center. The timber shed in this scheme is elongated and used as a farmer’s market. By contrast, the same viewpoint in the BNYDC’s plan (rendering on the jump) simply shows the suburban-sized supermarket and acres of asphalt and concrete.

The MAS proposal joins an earlier plan put forth by Brent Porter of Pratt. We expect there will be more calls for creative have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too plans in the near future. To view the Admirals Row study commissioned by the National Guard, click here.

Update: We got our hands on renderings of five of the plans; they were created by Russell Crader and were funded by the Daniel K. Thorne Intervention Fund of the Northeast Office of the National Trust for Preservation.

The Morning After Update: See a slideshow of the entire MAS presentation here; read Gowanus Lounge's heartfelt editorial on the issue here.
Public Hearing on Admiral's Row Held Last Night [Brownstoner]
Pratties Have 'Cake-and-Eat-It' Design for Admiral's Row [Brownstoner]
Guard Starts Talks 'To Come Up With Alternatives' For Row [Brownstoner]
James Opens Door to (Partial) Admiral's Row Preservation [Brownstoner]
Renderings by Andrew Burdick of the studio collaborative and Architecture for Humanity New York

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Comments

Is there a link to the MAS plan?

Posted by: WBer at August 20, 2008 2:15 PM

Bravo to MAS! Yes, we can do better than the National Guard's plans.

Posted by: qis4quincy at August 20, 2008 3:11 PM

Certainly worthy of serious review by all concerned, and another sign that serious people/groups are putting a lot of time and effort into trying to find a win-win plan for the site. I hope that helps convince the powers that be that saving the Row is not an all or nothing scenario, and also convince everyone that a significant proportion of the population is concerned about both historic preservation and the needs and growth of the community.

Posted by: Montrose Morris at August 20, 2008 4:18 PM

q4q: the plans by MAS and Brent Porter are not alternatives to "the National Guard's plans," but whatever.

Posted by: altervoce at August 20, 2008 4:24 PM

I think we'll have to see what the naysayers come up with, but any of these would be better than the supermarket/monster parking lot plan.

Posted by: east river at August 20, 2008 4:26 PM

Mayor Bloomberg will personally blacklist the MAS board from La Cirque and the Four Seasons if they continue being annoying.
I don't think the preservationists have anything to worry about. Nothing is going to happen here except that the poison ivy will get thicker and the ironwork rustier. Not only is there no money for restoring theses lovely "white guys in white suits" villas, there will be no money for building a supermarket or an industrial building or anything else. I think the situation is so dire that we will not even be able to afford this third-world, low-budget development. This will go the way of the Brooklyn Bridge Park and the AY Gehry skyscrapers. all dead in the brooklyn water.

Posted by: sam at August 20, 2008 7:10 PM

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