THE SKYSCRAPER MUSEUM PRESENTS
Bond Street Reborn
March 6, 2008 | 6:30  PM
 NYPL Donnell Library  Auditorium
 20 West 53rd St. between  5th and  6th
 Free for Skyscraper Museum  members
 $5 Students and Seniors; $10  Regular Admission
 1.5 AIA CEU credit  available
 To register, visit  www.skyscraper.org/reny
 
Seemingly overnight, a quiet  strip of Bond Street between Lafayette and the Bowery has become one of the most  interesting blocks of new architecture in New York.  Three high-style  residential developments, 25, 40, and 48 Bond Street offer diverging essays in  homage to the cast-iron commercial storefronts and nineteenth-century row  houses. At the edge of the Noho historic district, these innovative projects  press the boundaries of contextualism and play with the mix of old and  new.
 
A distinguished panel of the  architects and developers behind these cutting-edge buildings will present their  projects and give an insider’s account of the transformation of Bond Street.  Tony Goldman, one of the first developers of Soho and Miami Beach, will  introduce his new project, 25 Bond, and George Schieferdecker and Stephen F  Byrns of BKSK Architects will discuss their design for the residence.  Farther  east, developers Romy Goldman, Donald Capoccia and their architect Deborah Berke  will discuss 48 Bond’s modern interpretation of the vernacular  loft.
 
Justin Davidson, critic for  New York Magazine, will moderate the panel’s discussion of development,  design, historical influences and the rebirth of a block and a  neighborhood.
 
| Bond Street Reborn  is the second event in The  Skyscraper Museum’s Winter/Spring lecture series, Re:NY│Recycle, Retrofit, Reinvent the  City. Recognizing the need for a great  majority of New York’s buildings to be modernized, but not replaced, the Museum  will examine “greening” the city by spotlighting a range of innovative projects  that feature landmark preservation, adaptive re-use, reinvented industrial  sites, and sustainable development. Each of the five programs will feature a  spectrum of professionals, including architects, engineers, community advocates,  academics, and developers. The series will connect leading innovators in  sustainable strategies to a diverse audience of community members, educators,  and policy makers. | 
 
 
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