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1.4M-SF WTC Convention Center Plan Stuns NAREE Panel
By Glen Thompson
Last updated: Jun 11, 2002 08:57AM
NEW
YORK CITY-At least 150 NAREE attendees trekked Downtown yesterday for a rare
aerial view of Ground Zero and a panel discussion moderated by Michael G. Desiato,
group managing director of Real Estate Media Inc., the parent company of GlobeSt.com.
But stunned as they were by the emotion-packed sight of the gaping hole that
was the World Trade Center, the SRO crowd couldn't help but be bowled over a
second time by WTC Association president Guy Tozzoli's out-of-the-blue pitch
for a 1.4 million-sf convention center to be built below grade at the twin towers
site.
Held on the 12th floor of 2 World Financial Center, Desiato's seminar, Downtown
Manhattan's Future, boasted some of the biggest names in commercial real estate.
Tozzoli shared the dais with Brookfield Financial chairman John E. Zuccotti,
Lower Manhattan Development Corp. chairman John C. Whitehead, Insignia/ESG vice
chairman John Powers, Grubb & Ellis senior managing director John Buttarazzi
and Mack-Cali CEO Mitchell Hersh.
The outing--attendees slid tokens into subway turnstiles to make the trip Downtown
in true New York fashion and crossed the pedestrian bridge that runs from Church
and Liberty Streets into the WFC complex--promised to be a highlight of NAREE's
36th annual conference. But Tozzoli's proposal swept through the room like a
surprise summer downpour, prompting attendees literally to examine the trade
center site from a new angle.
"Everybody's looked up. Look down," an emphatic Tozzoli said. "I'm
sure it's doable. Physically you know what's there. It's a big bathtub, almost
10 acres in size. Next to that bathtub are six contiguous acres. When I looked
at the problem, I didn't think 'What can we build?', but rather 'What does Lower
Manhattan need? What does New York City need?' The Javits Center is used to
capacity. There's not room for one show. Expanding the Javits Center is necessary
but we can't do it."
Tozzoli noted that 64 of the largest conventions in the country can't come here
because the city doesn't have enough exhibition space. He claimed that the Javits
lost 19 shows to larger venues last year alone.
The plan, while still in the thumbnail stage, sounds relatively simple. According
to Tozzoli, the WTC site bottoms out more than 70 feet below-grade. He proposes
one floor of a convention center with 36-foot ceilings and a second floor with
a ceiling height of 32 feet. The aggregate size of such a venue would be roughly
1.4 million sf and would be situated entirely below ground. He claimed it would
bring 3 million annual visitors to Lower Manhattan and collect $3 billion a
year in city revenues.
Among the plan's greatest advantages, Tozzoli says, is that it would provide
complete flexibility in the design and construction of above-grade structures,
thereby making it completely compatible with whatever WTC design the various
interested parties eventually settle upon.
Queried by Desiato about the plan, an apparently shell-shocked Whitehead tentatively
offered, "I certainly admire Mr. Tozzoli's enthusiasm. It's the first time
I've heard this. It's something I'll think about, I'm sure."
Other panelists seemed equally nonplussed, vaguely citing potential conflicts
with the city's bid for the 2012 Olympic Games, though all who commented said
the idea deserves consideration.
Whitehead appeared to regain his footing when GlobeSt.com National Online Editor
John Salustri asked for an update on the urban design study for Lower Manhattan.
"We're busily engaged in the plan," he said. "It's extremely
complicated because of all this underground construction. The subway lines have
to be built several years before anything [above ground]."
Whitehead stuck with the planned December release date for the plan and while
he maintained that the site study will not propose specific building designs,
he discussed the possibility of a museum that could be part of a WTC memorial.
A second building, he said, would be devoted to performing arts and possibly
occupied by the New York City Opera. Smaller performance companies "might
operate out of smaller spaces" to be built over the main facility, he noted.
"Those kinds of buildings must be developed," if Lower Manhattan is
to become the 24/7 community that all of the panelists envisioned, Whitehead
emphasized. "The rest of the site is available for office and above-ground
retail," he stated, adding that there are also plans for "some retail
below ground."
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