The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Developmen­t features a movable building

- By Deepti Hajela

NEW YORK » The city’s bid to host the 2012 Olympics in a rebuilt neighborho­od of rail yards and industrial buildings never came to fruition, but the massive Hudson Yards project rising there now isn’t suffering from a lack of Olympic-size ambition.

After five years of constructi­on, a $25 billion mini-city has been taking shape on Manhattan’s West Side where officials once wanted to build an Olympic and NFL stadium.

The developmen­t, which will include a hotel, a school, a retail mall, restaurant­s, public plazas and a skyscraper taller than the Empire State Building, is intended to transform what was one of the last underused, industrial stretches of Manhattan into a destinatio­n like Rockefelle­r Center.

And there’s hope a performing arts center being built in the area called The Shed will make it a cultural draw.

The four-story-high building, now partially complete, is equipped with a mechanical marvel: a giant telescopin­g shell that can be extended to turn an adjacent, public open-air plaza into a climate-controlled performanc­e hall with 120-foot ceilings.

Made of a steel frame covered by translucen­t panels, the shell rests on giant wheels that slide along rails to move it out to cover the plaza, which then becomes a space called The McCourt, named in honor of businessma­n Frank McCourt Jr., who donated $45 million to the project, an independen­t nonprofit cultural organizati­on. The shell deploys in five minutes, at a speed of a quarter-mile per hour.

When in use, the shell can hold an audience of 1,250 seated or 2,700 standing, which can come up to 3,000 when combined with space from the fixed building.

At a presentati­on to announce part of the performanc­e schedule for The Shed’s inaugural 2019 season, Robert Katchur, an associate principal at Diller Scofidio and Renfro, the design firm that in collaborat­ion with Rockwell Group came up with the concept of the shell, said the idea was to give the art presented there as much room as possible, instead of being limited to the space in the fixed building alone or to an open-air plaza that could be used only in good weather.

“We wanted it to be able to engage with the public realm,” he said.

When not being used, the

shell will be “nested” over the fixed structure, which is next to a residentia­l skyscraper also designed by Diller Scofidio and Renfro, and Rockwell Group.

Among the inaugural offerings next year will be a live production, conceived by filmmaker Steve McQueen and music giant Quincy Jones, exploring the impact and history of African-American music. Other artists connected to inaugural projects include poet Anne Carson,

opera singer Renee Fleming, and screenwrit­ers Jonathan Aibel and Glenn Berger.

“If the range of artists that we present represent the range of society, then you have a chance of welcoming people from all over the place,” said Alex Poots, the founding artistic director and CEO of The Shed.

When Hudson Yards is fully complete sometime in the first part of the next decade, developers say there will be 18 million square feet of residentia­l and commercial space, as well as 14 acres of public space.

 ?? RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People walk on the High Line Park that passes the Shed, center, in New York. The building, in Manhattan’s Hudson Yard’s developmen­t, is a new arts space consisting of a stationary building with a a shell constructe­d around it that can move in a matter...
RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People walk on the High Line Park that passes the Shed, center, in New York. The building, in Manhattan’s Hudson Yard’s developmen­t, is a new arts space consisting of a stationary building with a a shell constructe­d around it that can move in a matter...

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