Wednesday, September 25, 2013

REPOST: Idealized or caricature, architectural renderings are weapons in real estate


In a recent post for the New York Times, Elizabeth A. Harris featured how architectural renderings ignite discussions for decision-making parties that determine the success of an architectural project.

In recent weeks, two competing illustrations have popped up in different corners of the Internet. In one of them, eight silvery towers perch at the waterfront of Greenpoint, Brooklyn, like a fleet of sailboats waiting peacefully for their captains. In the other, swollen and clearly exaggerated buildings the color of sickly flamingos loom over a diminished Manhattan skyline, threatening to swallow their neighbors in a gluttonous fit.

Image Source: www.ny.curbed.com


Despite their differences, these two renderings depict the same development, called Greenpoint Landing. One illustration was created by the project’s developer several years ago to give a sense of the permissible size and scale on that site. The other was drawn by the project’s opponents just a few weeks ago. Guess which is which.


“The renderings presented to us at community meetings were coated in a gloss of trees and leaves and flowers, and translucent towers blending into the sky,” said Bess Long, a member of a group called Save Greenpoint, which created the sick-flamingo rendering. “Ours was to express the brutality.”

An architectural rendering is a premonition of sorts, an illustration of what a park or a bridge, an apartment building or an office tower, might look like, even before the first splash of concrete licks the ground. But its most important mission is not to show the girth of a building’s footprint or the shape of the windows; it is to gin up enthusiasm for a project, or to incite resistance.

So the real purpose of these drawings is not to predict the future. Their real goal is to control it.

“I would say your point of view is key,” said Craig Copeland, a senior associate principal at Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects. “A rendering is just a tool to amplify discussion.”
This particular type of megaphone has a long and feisty history in New York City. In “The Power Broker” by Robert A. Caro, for example — which chronicles how Robert Moses plowed his vision for New York into its parks, highways, bridges and public housing — a 1939 dispute is recalled over a bridge Mr. Moses hoped to build connecting Brooklyn to Battery Park.
“Moses’ announcement had been accompanied by an ‘artist’s rendering’ of the bridge,” Mr. Caro’s book explained, “that created the impression that the mammoth suspension span would have about as much impact on the Lower Manhattan landscape as an extra lamppost. This impression had been created by ‘rendering’ the bridge from directly overhead — way overhead — as it might be seen by a high-flying and myopic pigeon.”

So opponents drafted renderings of their own, Mr. Caro wrote. One illustration included in his book shows the bridge at the forefront all but swallowing the sad looking buildings behind it. Another includes helpful labels that detail views blocked and light “obliterated.”
Ultimately, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, no fan of Mr. Moses, killed the Brooklyn-Battery Bridge.

Drawing up an effective rendering, whether on a computer or by hand, is generally neither easy nor cheap, which places this tool of persuasion out of reach for most. (Ms. Long of Save Greenpoint is a former architect, and she worked with an artist and a photographer to make the group’s rendering.) But when architects market their services to clients, or when developers address community boards, they often bring along a lush illustration.

“It’s a sales technique,” said Michael Devonshire, an architectural conservator at Jan Hird Pokorny Associates and a member of the Landmarks Preservation Commission. “I would be surprised if any finished product ever looked like the rendering.”

Take, for example, an early rendering of One57, the city’s tallest and most expensive residential tower, which puts forward the building’s most palatable possible face, even to Andrew S. Dolkart, the director of the historic preservation program at Columbia University, who describes One57 as probably the most hated building in the city at the moment.

“This brilliantly uses light to make the building disappear as it goes up,” Mr. Dolkart said when asked to examine the rendering, which reflects the blue sky and the clouds, the sun’s sharp reflected glare nowhere to be seen. “It’s like it’s dissolving into the sky.

“And I don’t really see the hideous colors,” he added, describing strips of different blues that extend up the building’s skinny face.

A spokeswoman for One57’s developer, Extell, said in a statement that the rendering accurately represented the building’s “massing” and “tonality.”

Alfred Bradshaw, vice president of Greenpoint Landing Associates, said the current design for the Greenpoint project used materials like brick and casement windows that would blend with the neighborhood’s older buildings.

Three years ago, when Vornado Realty Trust sought approval from the City Council to build a skyscraper down the street from the Empire State Building and within 34 feet of its height, it, too, invoked a sparkling rendition of the building, designed by Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects. In that rendering, 15 Penn Plaza, as the building was called, was set, tall and elegant, against a pink Midtown sunset. The building almost seemed to glow from somewhere deep within its base, as if lit by a big pile of burning money.
Image Source: www.wikipedia.org

In response, other renderings surfaced. One showed the silhouette of the Empire State Building and its big new neighbor, seen from a faraway graveyard. Another offered a view of 15 Penn Plaza from the west, with the Empire State Building peeking gingerly from behind.

In a Council hearing, David Greenbaum, the president of the New York division of Vornado, said he was “somewhat troubled by the grossly misleading renderings that have been delivered to the press.” At the same hearing, Anthony E. Malkin, an owner of the Empire State Building, testified that 15 Penn Plaza was reminiscent of a Size 22 foot in a Size 12 shoe. “It’s just bloody big,” he said.

The building was approved by the Council in 2010 but shelved by Vornado this spring. Instead, the company announced that it would focus on reinvigorating the Hotel Pennsylvania, its building on that site — and a building that, conveniently, already exists.You can walk over and see what it looks like right now.
New York-based architect William B. Lauder specializes in interior design and minimalistic architecture. He turns jam-packed apartments into spacious sanctuaries for the busy city workers. Check out this Facebook page to see his projects.