CNU 2008 New York Chapter Meet-Up

CNU New York Chapter Meet-Up in Austin
Porch at Threadgills World Headquarters (301 West Riverside Drive)
Thursday, April 3, 2008 7:30 PM - 9:30 PM

Join CNU New York at the archetypical Austin joint for a sampler of Southern Cooking and a very brief meeting on upcoming chapter activities. Well have a buffet — enough for a light dinner — at no charge.

The meet-up will be on the Porch at Threadgills World Headquarters (301 West Riverside Drive). Take a taxi or a 20 minute walk across the South Congress Bridge (thats the one with the bats), bear right for a block on Barton Springs Road and look left on Riverside Drive for Threadgills.

We look forward to seeing all New York New Urbanists there!

Get Your House Right - Book Talk March 14

Get Your House RightAs the housing boom of recent decades draws to a close, Americans are looking closely at what generates real value in their houses. It is becoming clear that size, “lawyer foyers,” and number of gables don’t count any more. Get Your House Right- Architectural Elements to Use and Avoid, a new book by CNU New York Board Member Marianne Cusato and Ben Pentreath, shows how well-considered, traditional design that is appropriate to place and region can create houses that feel right and have lasting value. Through their book, Ms. Cusato and Mr. Pentreath, together with co-authors Richard F. Sammons and Léon Krier, illustrate ways to add value to homes through everyday design and details.

Marianne Cusato is the renowned designer who pioneered the Lowe’s Katrina Cottage, for which she was the winner of the first annual “People’s Design Award” from the Copper Hewitt Museum, the Nation Design Museum of the Smithsonian Institute. Ben Pentreath is an award-winning architectural designer based in London, where he is working on a variety of new housing developments, in particular for HRH The Prince of Wales, at Poundbury, Newquay, and Truro.

Sponsored jointly by CNU New York and the ICA&CA, the authors will discuss the topic of their new book and explore ways to achieve authentic architectural design in today’s world.

Where: Library at the General Society
20 West 44th Street

When: Friday, March 14
Reception at 6:30 pm, Lecture to begin at 7:00 pm.

Books will be available for sale and signing by the authors Marianne Cusato, Ben Pentreath and Richard Sammons.

Admission is FREE for Members of the ICA&CA and employees of professional members firms:
FREE for members of the CNU; $10 for the general public.

RSVP: To reserve, please call (212) 730-9646, ext. 109.

15 CPW - The New York Apartment House Comes Home

Presentation by CNU New York Board Member Paul Whalen and Developer Arthur Zeckendorf

15 CPWFifteen Central Park West has captured the imagination of New York’s press and public like few other buildings in recent history. The project’s economic success and its high-profile location have demonstrated the continuing viability of classicism in today’s market as well as in current architectural discourse.

Whalen, a Partner at Robert A.M. Stern Architects, will talk about designing a modern New York building that learns from our city’s great apartment house tradition. Zeckendorf will describe the vision and financial foundation that made the project possible.

Where: Library at the General Society, 20 West 44th Street.

When: Reception at 6:30 pm, Lecture to begin at 7:00 pm.

Admission is FREE for Members of the ICA&CA and employees of professional members firms; $10 for the general public.

To reserve, please call (212) 730-9646, ext. 109.

Liberty Harbor Tour, December 8

Liberty Harbor by Michael Morrissey

Rendering by Michael Morrissey

All members of CNU New York are invited to a tour of Liberty Harbor, an urban infill TND by Duany Plater-Zyberk & Company. The following description is from their website, DPZ.com:

Voted the State of New Jersey’s best new development of 2001 by the American Planning Association. When complete, the neighborhood of Liberty Harbor North will be the most thorough exemplification to date of the principles of the New Urbanism. Due to its high-density housing, multiple transit connections, and pedestrian-oriented, mixed-use streetscape, this development is likely to serve as a textbook model for healthy urban growth in the future. Located just a half mile west of the Hudson River on the north bank of the Morris Canal, the 80-acre brownfield site in Jersey City boasts dramatic views of Lower Manhattan to the east and the Statue of Liberty to the south. A new light rail will provide two stops in the neighborhood; and the Grove Street PATH Train, with service to both Lower Manhattan and Midtown, is a five-minute walk away. A water taxi offers convenient access to Lower Manhattan, and New York Waterways has expressed interest in providing large-scale ferry service in the near future. The site is bordered by the Van Vorst neighborhood to the east and the Hamilton Park neighborhood to the north– two historic neighborhoods worthy of emulation.

The plan is organized as an open network of small city blocks, designed to take optimal advantage of the beauty and convenience of the site. Its structure most closely resembles that of the Upper West Side, where a few wide avenues lined with tall buildings are connected by many narrow streets lined with townhouses. Most of the smaller streets are oriented southward toward the canal, with the central street directed at the Statue of Liberty. Three larger-scale thoroughfares cross the site on an east-west axis, the southernmost of which connects to a linear park along the canal. Together with Liberty State Park on the other side of the canal, this park provides public access to the waterfront and serves as a permanent greenscape along the neighborhood’s southern border. The plan, as approved by the City, contains: 6,000 housing units, with a gross residential density of over 100 units per acre; 500,000 sq.ft. of retail; 4,000,000 sq.ft. of office space; 8 acres of parks/open space; and a school and other civic spaces.

The tour is Saturday, December 11 from 11 am to 2 pm. For more information, contact info@cnu-ny.org

New Urbanism in New York, April 25

Join us for CNU New York’s First Event

CNU New York, the newest chapter of the Congress for the New Urbanism, will hold its first public event on Wednesday, April 25th at 6 PM at the Municipal Art Society, 457 Madison Avenue at East 50th. The President of the CNU, John Norquist, will speak with Hilary Ballon, the Curator of the much talked-about museum exhibition ‘Robert Moses and the Modern City: the Road to Recreation.’

While Mayor of Milwaukee, Norquist tore down an inner-city highway that divided the city and replaced it with a boulevard and mixed-use buildings that knit the city’s fabric back together again. As President of the CNU, he has worked with the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development to tear down housing projects built in the 1950s and 1960s and to replace them with mixed-use, mixed income neighborhoods.

‘Robert Moses and the Modern City’ reevaluates the career of the great planner and administrator who built many of New York’s highways, housing projects, parks and infrastructure, particularly examining the large-scale projects for which he was both praised and vilified. Near the end of his career, Jane Jacobs famously defeated Moses, but now one hears in New York architectural circles that “Jane Jacobs was wrong, and Robert Moses was right.” Once again there is a call for urban mega-projects.

Moses’s multiple projects to house the middle class in the city are promoted as models. Even his highways like the Cross Bronx Expressway are praised, because they are part of an automobile infrastructure that’s considered important. But Norquist is a consultant for a group in the Bronx that wants to tear down Moses’s Sheridan Expressway and replace it with traditional streets and buildings. The New York debate on the city’s master builder will be enriched by this perspective from the President of this national urban design movement, “the most important phenomenon to emerge in American architecture in the post-Cold War era,” according to the architecture critic of the New York Times.

Wednesday April 25th, 2007.
Reception at 6 pm; Talks and Q & A from 6:30 – 8:30 pm.

Space is limited. For reservations, please send an e-mail with your name and the number of places desired to RSVP@cnuny.org.