Also today: A look at the sixth Chicago Architecture Biennial, and California proposes new regulations to prevent landfill fires. |
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In Midtown Manhattan, the former headquarters of Pfizer is being stripped down to its columns, beams and concrete slabs. Developers plan to turn the towers into roughly 1,600 rental apartments, one of several redevelopment projects that is converting office space into much-needed housing — and reshaping the future of New York City’s core commercial center. Credit: Rachael Dottle For years, office-to-residential conversions were concentrated in lower Manhattan, where buildings tend to be older. But recent changes in zoning laws and project restrictions — plus a weak office market — have developers eyeing newer properties farther north. As of early September, there are 12.4 million square feet of conversion projects underway or planned in Manhattan. About half of those are located in Midtown. Read more from Natalie Wong, Rachael Dottle and Marie Patino today on Bloomberg: A Wave of New Apartment Buildings Is Set to Take Over Midtown Manhattan — Linda Poon | |
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An unusual “village” aims to help people leave long-term homelessness for good (NPR) -
New York City is full of green space. You just have to find it (New York Times) -
Outcry as Trump plots more roads and logging in US forests: ‘You can almost hear the chainsaws’ (Guardian) -
Under pressure: Uber’s navigation system endangers the public with reckless driving directions (Streetsblog) -
From rooftops to honey jars, Athens is abuzz with urban beekeeping (Associated Press) | |
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