Municipalities and their residents can be fickle and unpredictable in their attitudes toward new construction. Objections about a building’s height or jobsite’s noise and traffic have been known to delay, and even halt, projects, which is why developers and AEC teams spend more time these days on community outreach.
A case in point can be found is Nashville, Tenn., one of the country’s hotter real estate markets, where developers are looking to plant their flags and make an impression. Indianapolis-based Buckingham Cos., a development and property management company, has proposed building a 38-story, 300,000-sf residential skyscraper that would be 14 stories higher than current zoning allows.
Buckingham and its architect, New York-based Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, are trying to convince local officials and neighbors that a taller, narrower high rise would be better than a shorter building with the same square footage. Why? Because it would block less sunlight on pools of surrounding residential buildings, such as Terrazzo, a condo-office building next door to the half-acre parking lot on which Buckingham wants to erect its tower.
The Nashville Business Journal reports that the developer presented “sunlight studies” as part of its sales pitch to city officials during a Sept. 1 meeting. That same afternoon, the developer met with residents of several high rises near the proposed project, to ensure them that the new building wouldn’t unduly impede their balcony views or swimming experiences.
(The tire maker Bridgestone, which is currently building its U.S. headquarters in Nashville, had to deal with similar issues with residents living in a shorter condo building next door to its proposed tower.)
The design review committee of Nashville’s Metropolitan Development and Housing Agency has already given its unanimous conceptual approval to Buckingham’s tower, pending an approval by the city’s Board of Zoning Appeals, which is scheduled to address the tower’s height variance request on Sept. 17. Doug Sloan, acting executive director of Nashville’s planning department, has also expressed concern about the materials this building will use and how it will look from the highway.
If all goes as planned, Buckingham and its building team expect to start construction on the 200-plus-room tower next year, and open the building by 2018.
However, developers are likely to find themselves playing defense in the future, as long as they keep trying to squeeze just one more building onto the tiniest of desirable urban spaces. In Chicago, BJB Partners, which owns an apartment building at Millennium Park Plaza, has proposed a 41-story residential/hotel tower on a plot of land that, according to Crain’s Chicago Business, is “smaller than a tennis court.” And CCTV America last month reported on the trend toward “skinny” luxury residential skyscrapers in New York, including one under construction that’s less than 60 feet wide.
Related Stories
| May 15, 2012
One World Trade Center goes to new height of sustainability
One of the biggest challenges in developing this concrete mixture was meeting the Port Authority of New York/New Jersey’s strict requirement for the replacement of cement.
| May 14, 2012
SOM to break ground on supertall structure in China
The 1,740-feet (530-meter) tall tower will house offices, 300 service apartments and a 350-room, 5-star hotel beneath an arched top.
| May 14, 2012
Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture design Seoul’s Dancing Dragons
Supertall two-tower complex located in Seoul’s Yongsan International Business District.
| May 1, 2012
Time-lapse video: World Trade Center, New York
One World Trade Center, being built at the site of the fallen twin towers, surpassed the Empire State Building on Monday as the tallest building in New York.
| Apr 27, 2012
China Mobile selects Leo A Daly to design three buildings at its new HQ
LEO A DALY, in collaboration with Local Design Institute WDCE, wins competition to design Phase 2, Plot B, of Campus.
| Apr 25, 2012
McCarthy introduces high school students to a career in construction
High school students from the ACE Mentoring Program tour the new CHOC Children’s Patient Tower in Orange, Calif.
| Apr 25, 2012
J.C. Anderson selected for 50,000-sf build out at Chicago’s DePaul University
The build-out will consist of the construction of new offices, meeting rooms, video rooms and a state-of-the-art multi-tiered Trading Room.
| Apr 24, 2012
ULI Real Estate Consensus Forecast, projects improvements for the real estate industry through 2014
Survey is based on opinions from 38 of the nation’s leading real estate economists and analysts and suggests a marked increase in commercial real estate activity, with total transaction volume expected to rise from $250 billion in 2012 to $312 billion in 2014.
| Apr 23, 2012
Innovative engineering behind BIG’s Vancouver Tower
Buro Happold’s structural design supports the top-heavy, complex building in a high seismic zone; engineers are using BIM technology to design a concrete structure with post-tensioned walls.
| Apr 10, 2012
Moriarty & Associates selected as GC for Miami’s BrickellHouse Condo
Construction of the 46-story development is schedule to get underway this summer and be completed in 2014.