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JJ: 9/11 families find empty park at 'Empty Sky' ceremony when organizers quietly cancel it
#31
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By Felix Alarcon/The Jersey Journal 

on September 08, 2013 at 7:02 PM, updated September 08, 2013 at 9:30 PM

Dozens of families who lost loved one in the terrorists attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 showed up today for a memorial service at the Empty Sky 9/11 memorial in Liberty State Park in Jersey City. All they found was an empty park.

The New Jersey 9/11 Memorial Foundation, a nonprofit group that formed to help raise money to get the memorial built, said this afternoon it canceled the event for number of reasons, including a lack of interest.

In a response to people at the memorial that were angry they weren't notified of the cancellation, an unnamed official posted on the group's Facebook page that "It is very difficult for us to get in touch with the family members when the state is not directly involved."

Reached by phone, an official with the group who wasn't authorized to speak for the group, said part of the reason for the cancellation is that Gov. Chris Christie wasn't going to attend and musicians scheduled to perform also backed out.

"It was a disgrace that we couldn't get speakers and politicians to come forward," the official said. 

Some families, clutching postcard invitations to the event, waited more than an hour at the park before one person there finally received confirmation that it was off.

"Many family members are here waiting and nothing is happening," Loren Asciak posted on the group's Facebook page. "This is very disappointing."

Empty Sky is the official state memorial that was dedicated in 2011, for the 10th anniversary of the attacks.

"I feel I'll never have closure, but I'm glad people are aware of it and are coming out," said Shelly Kane from Englewood, who was at least buoyed by the number of other families that turned out today. Kane lost her son, Howard Lee Kane, 40, when two planes crashed into the World Trade Center towers.

Michael Raymundo, of Bayonne, broke the news to the few families that remained past 2 p.m.

"I kept calling the number on the postcard and no one picked up," said Raymundo, whose wife's two cousins died at the Twin Towers. "Then I got a call back from that number and they said there was Sandy damage and lack of support from the government. ... It's bad that they cancelled this. Every year we do this."

Cheryl Charette, of Millburn, whose husband, Mark, 38, died at the World Trade Center, was the first to arrive for the event.

"I think it's a beautiful memorial," she said before learning that the tribute would not be held. "This is the memorial of New Jersey and it's disappointing that no one is here." 

Elaine Asciak and her daughter, Loren, were especially disappointed because they're not able to attend the 9/11 memorial in Manhattan Wednesday. Elaine's husband, Michael, 44, died in the WTC attacks.

"The first year I couldn't stop crying," Elaine said. "But it gets easier."

Tom and JoAnn Meehan, of Toms River, who recently returned from Guantanamo Bay as one of the families selected to attend hearings of the five detainees charged with the 9/11 attacks, sat in lawn chairs, waiting patiently for the ceremony. Their daughter, Colleen Ann Barkow, 26, died in the WTC attacks.

"We miss her deeply every year," Tom Meehan said. "This is disappointing that no government officials showed up."

http://www.nj.com/hudson/index.ssf/20 ... _minute.html#incart_river

© 2013 NJ.com. All rights reserved.


Posted on: 2013/9/9 1:54
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Re: Kayaking in JC
#32
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For anyone that's interested, I downloaded hi-res NOAA charts for the Upper and Lower Harbor. You can download them by clicking below and zooming in a few times to get to the originals, which are about 15mb a piece.  

http://s1256.photobucket.com/user/paulushooker/library/


Posted on: 2013/8/18 5:45
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Re: Kayaking in JC
#33
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Quote:

brewster wrote:
Bravo PH! How's the new boat? And how are you working that tin, jigging near the bottom or retrieving? Is that clam on there?

My son and I were out yesterday 10:30 to 2, he working a hi-lo with fishbites and me a bucktail and teaser with Gulp hoping for a fluke. He had 7 spots & croakers, me zip. The boy caught dinner!

Was the first calm day in a while, but the wind rose from ~6kt to 15 just after we took off. Good timing was lucky. Another weid thing wa that even though high tide was 11:50, we still drifted north till after 1. I kept waiting for it to reverse, and finally we had to paddle back from north of Ellis back to the south end kayak launch.


That's great that you made it out. Wow 7 spots is great eating! Nice work.

The new yak is great. It's a 10ft Old Town Vapor Angler and tracks very nicely. My old Prijon was a whitewater river boat so every time I would do a stroke it would twist. Glad to have gotten that off my hands.

The only thing I don't like about it is the seat. It's brutal. Next time I'm using my PFD as the cushion. Otherwise it's really a great harbor boat.

I was using clams and just jigging in about 8ft. of water. I tell ya, they were nibbling and stealing the bait constantly. Definitely a good time, though.

Posted on: 2013/8/12 19:54
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Re: Kayaking in JC
#34
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Testing the new fishing yak and caught 3 croakers and a spot.

Croaker

Spot

Croaker #2

Croaker #3


Posted on: 2013/8/12 2:53
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Re: My coffee maker broke!
#35
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My Favorite, the Bialetti Moka Express:


Posted on: 2013/8/10 2:40
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Re: Village Fishmonger comes to JC!!!
#36
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I like Morton Williams for their fish selection. I've had good results there especially with their wild salmon, bronzino and snapper.

I still miss the days of the International Food Market where Target now stands. That place had tanks with lobsters, crabs and all sorts of fish swimming and ready for the taking.

If Hmart would ever set up shop in JC, I'm sure they would have a decent seafood selection.

Posted on: 2013/8/8 23:29
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Re: Gov. Christie's shameless $2M self-promotion: Editorial
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Another interesting tidbit on this story:

"A report by New Jersey's Asbury Park Press, citing recently unveiled documents, suggests that MWW may have won the work because it proposed featuring Gov. Chris Christie (R) in ads while a competing bid from Sigma Group did not. It also reported that MWW and a subcontractor are billing the state $4.7 million for employee compensation, compared with Sigma's proposed $2.5 million request for payment."

http://www.prweekus.com/nj-papers-que ... -campaign/article/306363/

Posted on: 2013/8/8 15:39
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Re: Kayaking in JC
#38
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New fishing kayak comes in tomorrow so I might see you on the water this weekend. I got the clams and bunker all ready to go.

Posted on: 2013/8/7 19:37
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Re: Whole Foods in JC?
#39
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Hmart is a great store. The seafood alone is a reason to shop here.

Posted on: 2013/8/4 15:17
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Re: Ridiculous fines...
#40
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Looks like it's legal to drink on YOUR stoop:

Jersey City Municipal Code

§ 84-38. Definitions.

§ 84-38. Definitions.permanent link to this piece of content

As used in this Article, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated:

ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE - Any liquid intended for human consumption containing more than one-half of one percent (1/2 of 1%) of alcohol by volume.

PUBLIC PLACE - A place to which the public or a substantial group of persons has access, including but not limited to any highway, street, road, sidewalk, parking area, shopping area, place of amusement, playground, park or beach located within the city, except that the definition of a "public place" shall not include those premises duly licensed for the sale and consumption of alcoholic beverages on the premises or within their own private property.


Posted on: 2013/7/23 16:45
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Re: Middle Eastern Grocery Store?
#41
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The C-Town on 885 Bergen Ave has a decent middle eastern food selection.

Posted on: 2013/7/22 18:35
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Re: Kayaking in JC
#42
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In case anyone is interested, I'm selling my German-made Prijon Boxer river kayak. It has scratches from use is still very much seaworthy and a fun boat to paddle down rivers or creeks. 9 ft 10 in long, 25" wide, 40lbs. I am 6'3 and 225 and I fit into this boat with ease. Has a fully adjustable seat and footpads. $250 OBO. PM me if interested.

 photo 2013-07-22094835_zps2245c55b.jpg

 photo 2013-07-22094905_zps3d24d4a9.jpg


Posted on: 2013/7/22 15:54
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Re: Kayaking in JC
#43
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Quote:

SteveWilson29 wrote: Is there still nowhere downtown to store a canoe/kayak?

There appears to be a no-frills storage facility right next to Liberty State park that stores sailboats and power boats. Perhaps they would store kayaks.


Posted on: 2013/7/17 16:09
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Re: Kayaking in JC
#44
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I caught a croaker using a minnow lure on Saturday. I went out on Sunday too but no luck.

Posted on: 2013/7/16 23:43
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Re: Kayaking in JC
#45
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Resized Image


From Saturday. Fishing in the rain.

Posted on: 2013/7/16 22:17
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Re: Former Gov. McGreevey to head Jersey City jobs commission
#46
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Quote:

Frinjc wrote: I don't know what to feel about this thread, whether the smears or insinuations from the kids sneering at the "princess" or the sense of "here we go again" after an election that was supposed to give us some fresh air. Anyway, my own take at this point is to give the benefit of the doubt to Steve. I would think that he checked the facts behind McGreevey reinsertion skills before he made such an appointment. In that case he has my full approval, hope and responsibility needs to be spread at all corners of the city.

+1 on that besides, McGreevey's tenure will be scrutinized not just by JC residents but the media as well. He was written up my big news organizations and I think it's in his best interest to keep it legit.


Posted on: 2013/7/16 1:26
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Re: Former Gov. McGreevey to head Jersey City jobs commission
#47
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Quote:

Monroe wrote: [quote] As far as 'great credentials', McGreevey has no accomplishments as Governor that I can recall.

He signed legislation to create the country's first state-supported stem-cell research facility, enacted domestic partnerships in NJ before it was hip, reformed child welfare laws, instituted needle-exchange program to combat AIDS. Experience-wise — was governor. Was mayor of Woodbridge. Was in the State Senate and Assembly. I mean geez, you may not like the guy but the you can't say he lacks experience, especially on issues that were considered controversial at the time. Why is this bad for JC again?


Posted on: 2013/7/14 4:29
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Re: Former Gov. McGreevey to head Jersey City jobs commission
#48
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Jersey City's visibility is definitely on the rise and we need people that are smart, motivated and passionate to continue the progress. I think that despite his personal drama and mistakes, his experience is valuable, especially to this new administration. He's from here and I think he can offer a lot of insight so I am willing to see what he has to offer.


Posted on: 2013/7/12 19:06
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Re: Maxwell's coming to JC?
#49
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I think it will really help in extending Newark Ave as a restaurant/pub row. If only we can make the other end of Newark stretch towards the Powerhouse.


Posted on: 2013/7/12 18:19
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Re: Maxwell's coming to JC?
#50
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I agree. I love the facade and you gotta keep that Polish white eagle flying.


Posted on: 2013/7/12 14:15
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Re: Maxwell's coming to JC?
#51
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Co-owner of Hoboken's soon-to-close Maxwell's music club is looking at Jersey City venue

By John Ambrosio/The Jersey Journal 

Maxwell’s co-owner and booking agent Todd Abramson said he’s been talking with Jersey City developer Ben LoPiccolo about booking shows at a hall in Jersey City after famed music club Maxwell’s closes, the Wall Street Journal reported.

“I’ve had a few conversations with Ben,” Abramson told the Wall Street Journal, referring to holding events at White Eagle Hall, 337-339 Newark Ave. “My sense is that there would be much more support for what I do in Jersey City from both residents and the city itself than I’m finding in Hoboken right now.”

Since last month’s announcement that the beloved indie-rock venue will be closing at the end of July, rumors have been circulating that Abramson, whom many credit with creating the venue’s unique atmosphere, might seek greener pastures in Jersey City. 

Most of the rumors stem from comments Abramson made praising Jersey City and likening its community of artists and musicians to that of Brooklyn. At the same time, Abramson has been critical of the changes he’s seen in Hoboken over the years and cited difficulties with providing parking and a radically different bar scene as reasons for the musical hot spot’s closing. 

“We were offered a renewal with rates that weren’t necessarily onerous,” Abramson has said. “But after much thought, given the changing nature of Hoboken and the difficulties of trying to run a business in this town, we decided it was time.”

Looking to the future, Abramson called White Eagle Hall “an option,” and noted that he was looking at several sites around Jersey City.

The former Bingo hall gained national notoriety in the late 1980s as the cramped training facility of the nationally ranked St. Anthony High basketball team.

LoPiccolo, the CEO of Ben LoPiccolo Development Group LLC, has been in the process of renovating the historic White Eagle Hall since he purchased it in 2007.

LoPiccolo told The Jersey Journal that he has grand plans for the Newark Avenue venue.

Included in those plans are an 800-person, multipurpose arts space and two new restaurants.

While it remains to be seen whether the hall, which is scheduled to reopen some time next year, will be able to replace the soon-to-be-defunct Maxwell’s, Abramson told the Wall Street Journal that he’s more than willing to try.

“I understand that the closing of Maxwell’s creates a void in New Jersey, and I’d like to be the person to turn around and fill that void,” Abramson said.


Posted on: 2013/7/12 12:20
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Re: Brazen bicycle theft on Jersey Ave. btwn 7th and 8th St.
#52
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I saw two guys on bikes turn on Marin from York St. last week. The tall guy was thin and had a bandage on his forearm and seemed to be in his late 40s or early 50s. The other was a young kid in his early teens. When I walked in front of Tommy Two Scoops, there was a smashed car window right in front and I bet they are the same guys.


Posted on: 2013/6/26 20:58
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Re: Jersey City mayor-elect rappels off skyscraper for charity
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That's pretty badass. Wait to go, Steve.


Posted on: 2013/6/21 22:20
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Re: Kayak Eco-tours at Liberty State Park
#54
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Just to let you know that the registration form PDF link is broken.


Posted on: 2013/6/12 1:53
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Re: Local Indie Musicians Starting New Music Series in PAD
#55
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Quote:

brewster wrote: This sounds great, but I imagine they're breaking several zoning and liquor laws. It's tough enough to get permits to do something like this at a block party. And why there's no music in JC.

This is exactly why this election was so important. If people want Jersey City to have live music and events like this, then decisive steps need to be taken by the new administration to transform JC into a culture-friendly, business friendly town. Right now, the first thing that pops into everyone's heads is who do I have to convince to give me a permit. I'm not saying to throw fire safety and the public's right to quiet enjoyment out the window, but create a streamlined process where events like this can exist or designate the PAD to be a live district. We need more flxibility and less red tape.


Posted on: 2013/6/6 12:47
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Re: U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg dies at 89
#56
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Did not forget at all. And because he's a NJ Republican means that there is no guarantee that he will appoint another Republican. It's not like he got the warmest of receptions on the national stage from his party and for him to pander to the Tea Party crowd is pointless so I don't think he will go there. I guess we'll see but I'm betting on Booker.


Posted on: 2013/6/3 21:59
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Re: U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg dies at 89
#57
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Absolutely. But in this case, I don't see him appointing Lautenberg's wife (or anyone else) to be the placeholder.


Posted on: 2013/6/3 19:30
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Re: U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg dies at 89
#58
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Welcome to the NJ Senate, Mr. Booker.


Posted on: 2013/6/3 19:04
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Re: Berry Lane Park
#59
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The park is going to be built in phases. The city did the heavy lifting, so to speak, by getting cleanup grants and negotiating with PPG to clean it up but the actual building of the other fields will have to be done over time with private funds through fundraising. 

The park is expected to be managed by a local advocacy organization, like a "Friends of Berry Lane Park" but currently there is no group out there that is organized enough to lead it. If residents want the soccer field, basketball courts or tennis courts to be built, they have to want it and lobby for it with their local council people. Typically, corporate giving will occur only if the management of the park and end-users of the park are all lined up so it's up to the local community to make this happen.


Posted on: 2013/5/26 13:59
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Jackson Green development at the HUB mentioned in NY Times
#60
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B2 by SHoP Architects is the first of three new residential towers planned for Atlantic Yards in Brooklyn. At 32 stories, it will be the tallest modular building in the world.

SHoP Architects
B2 by SHoP Architects is the first of three new residential towers planned for Atlantic Yards in Brooklyn. At 32 stories, it will be the tallest modular building in the world.

It’s an exciting time for modular building, especially in New York, and as someone who has been deeply immersed in the world of prefabrication for over a decade, I am glad to see the much-maligned building technology finding its proper niche. It’s the killer app for the modular industry.

B2, a 32-story tower that is part of a 1,500-unit, mixed-use complex designed by SHoP Architects for Brooklyn’s Atlantic Yards, will soon be the tallest modular building in the world. nARCHITECTS recently won adaptNYC’s competition to design a micro-unit apartment building, and will see its concept transformed into a 10-story building by 2015. It will be the first multiunit building in Manhattan to be built with modular construction. A variety of housing types, from single-family to midrise/mixed-use buildings, characterizes the over 300,000 square feet of modular housing that GRO Architects is designing in Jersey City and Baltimore. And THE STACK by GLUCK+, one of New York City’s first prefabricated steel and concrete residential buildings, will provide the city with 28 moderate-income apartments.

The Stack by GLUCK+ was one of New York City’s first prefabricated steel and concrete residential buildings and offers a new model for sustainable construction.|

GLUCK+
The Stack by GLUCK+ was one of New York City’s first prefabricated steel and concrete residential buildings and offers a new model for sustainable construction.

None of these architects are “prefab” architects, they’ve simply determined that for these projects, prefab makes the most sense. It’s the ideal application in terms of efficiency when building higher density and with that, the larger quantities of repetitive units.

Jackson Green in Jersey City, N.J., by GRO Architects features 22 attached single-family townhomes, which use modular construction to achieve sustainable and affordable housing.

GRO Architects
Jackson Green in Jersey City, N.J., by GRO Architects features 22 attached single-family townhomes, which use modular construction to achieve sustainable and affordable housing.

As GRO’s Nicole Robertson says, “There is sheer economy of scale that emerges as we build a dense multifamily project, and it is the integration of digital technology on both the design and fabrication side that make the end product sustainable.”

Modular construction not only makes construction more precise, sustainable and economically efficient, it can help relieve New Yorkers (and of course, any other urban inhabitants) of the typical congestion and extended construction times associated with conventional building practices. “We believe a modular approach to high-rise housing will lead to a better quality of life for communities living near and around modular-based building sites,” says Gregg Pasquarelli, architect and principal of SHoP Architects. “Why shouldn’t we use assembly line techniques to build higher quality buildings? Modular construction offers the possibility of safer sites and better-manufactured buildings at standard construction costs. It’s a win-win proposition.”

nARCHITECTS’ Ammr Vandal concurs. Her firm’s micro-unit, she says, “makes a big impact with small moves. The smaller units are complemented by residential amenities provided in the building, promoting the concept of living beyond one’s four walls.”

Microunits in New York City designed by nARCHITECTS.

nARCHITECTS
Microunits in New York City designed by nARCHITECTS.

In contrast to regular old housing construction, which happens pretty much the same way it has for decades, if not a century, prefab has long been promising better design and innovation and — the key to its intrigue — a more affordable path to good architecture.

Much of that effort has been directed toward the design of single-family homes, what The Wall Street Journal described in 2004 as a “push to turn houses that come on trucks into objets d’art.” But using prefab for single-family homes, given the reality of current trends in financing, construction and development, will never quite achieve the desired goals of efficiency, affordability and good design. One custom prefab home is expensive and complicated to produce; the second one, less so. But it’s not until one can get to say, 20 or more homes that we’re looking at a new way of building. So single-family prefab remains largely in the realm of the prototype. Almost without exception, the wheel is at least partially reinvented every time.

Just over a decade ago, when I published my book “Prefab,” the potential for factory fabrication to improve housing was tenable (and explains why so many architects have been obsessed with taking on the challenge). But after I evangelized for years after about prefab’s transformative potential — including, while I was editor in chief of Dwell magazine, the introduction of an international home-design competition to design a modern affordable prefab home, which in turn led to the development of a line of Dwell-licensed prefab homes — one thing became clear to me: Prefab is best utilized in the design and construction not of single-family homes but of multifamily housing.

In 2004, over 500 people traveled to Pittsboro, N.C., to preview the Dwell Home by Resolution: 4 Architecture.

Bryan Burkhart
In 2004, over 500 people traveled to Pittsboro, N.C., to preview the Dwell Home by Resolution: 4 Architecture.

Absent economies of scale, the dreamed-of cost savings are basically impossible to achieve. Imagine building a custom car on a Ford assembly line and you can get a sense of how that might work. The repetition involved in creating a multi-unit building simply aligns with prefab’s capabilities in a way that single-family homebuilding does not.

Though prefabrication has a long history of capturing the public imagination dating at least as far back as Sears, Roebuck & Co., which sold nearly 100,000 houses by mail between 1908 and 1940, it has run up against numerous obstacles, from financing to factory standards to social stigma. And, despite a MoMA retrospective in 2008, that hasn’t changed much in recent years. The economic downturn of the mid-2000s decimated every part of the housing industry, and prefab was no exception. “When the credit market collapsed so, too, did the prefab market,” Leo Marmol of Marmol Radziner Architects (whose firm had been part of the Dwell prefab competition) told me recently. His firm, which had acquired and then shut down its factory facility) is today busy focusing on custom design work, using prefab only rarely.

Resolution: 4 Architecture is doing a healthy business in prefab homes like the Dune Road Beach House, which survived Hurricane Sandy with nary a scratch. They have been getting more and more queries for multi-family projects of late.

Resolution: 4 Architecture
Resolution: 4 Architecture is doing a healthy business in prefab homes like the Dune Road Beach House, which survived Hurricane Sandy with nary a scratch. They have been getting more and more queries for multi-family projects of late.

It’s not that architects shouldn’t use factory fabrication to design and build homes. Many do with great results. Yet architect-designed homes account for a scant 5 to 7 percent of the nation’s housing stock, architect-designed prefab ones even less. Multifamily opens the door for those numbers to increase. According to Joseph Tanney, the architect and principal of Resolution: 4, which focuses now on single-family prefab but is getting numerous inquiries about multifamily these days for everything from dorms to micro-units, “The residential modular industry is salivating at the prospect of building more multifamily projects. It’s a natural extension to think in terms of aggregation of the modules into higher density patterns, both architecturally and economically.

“I don’t think that they are just now discovering prefab for multifamily,” he continues. “It’s just taking time for it to evolve into a higher level of design.”

It’s a natural evolution for architects to seriously (once again) contemplate the use of prefab in multifamily applications. Thus far, other building sectors — commercial, institutional — have been, frankly, more innovative, more willing to embrace new tools like parametric software, which is used to create 3-D models that help orient buildings for optimal energy efficiency. Residential is playing catch-up on this and it’s about time.

More innovation in factory-produced housing, says GRO’s Robertson, “prevents the cookie-cutter sameness often associated with the process and allows for novel architectural form, nuance and variation” as well as efficiency. This is critical to moving from highly individuated single-family home design to multifamily buildings where individuality can find architectural expression.

Now that the market for housing has rebounded and indeed is booming in some cities, multifamily prefab makes sense for many reasons. The demand for rental housing is rapidly increasing as the interest in home ownership has waned post-housing bust. For the first time ever, California cities are seeing the need for more multifamily housing over single-family homes. And a recent study by Smart Growth America that examined three distinct housing development types revealed that mixed-use infill (when buildings are constructed to occupy the space between existing ones) produced 1,150 times more net tax revenue per acre than suburban development. The sort of community a growing percentage of the population is seeking takes the form of a denser, walkable urban neighborhood. Prefab can make that happen more quickly, efficiently and economically than conventional construction — and increasingly, it’s doing exactly that.


Posted on: 2013/5/24 21:29
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