ADVERTISEMENT
You will be redirected to your destination in 15 seconds.
Subscribe to Interior Design
Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

Lucky 13

Monica Khemsurov -- Interior Design, 9/1/2012 2:00:00 AM

lucky 13
view the slideshow

New Yorkers may fondly describe WNET as TV’s wise, old grandfather—its channel Thirteen being the most popular in U.S. public broadcasting. What they’d be less likely to call WNET is cutting-edge where design is concerned, and until recently they’d have been right. Before Architecture + Information completed a new studio facility and headquarters, WNET had been operating from premises verging on 15 years old. It also faced funding shortfalls in the wake of the economic downturn, so A+I principals Dag Folger and Brad Zizmor found a way to kill two birds with one stone. “We leveraged new technology to increase efficiency,” Zizmor says, while transforming“theWNET of yesteryear” into a new media powerhouse.

The first order of business was to move the studios from 10,000 square feet in Midtown, where old-school spotlights alone required a massive auxiliary air-conditioning room, to a 4,900-square-foot, two-story corner at Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center on the UpperWestSide, where lighting is LED, and the digital connection is fiber-optic. In addition, digitization means that the studios’ robotic cameras can be operated from an offsite control room. Another space-saver is the main staircase, which doubles as a set for pledge drives as it hugs Alice Tully Hall’s curtain wall— a major upside as far as CEO Neal Shapiro is concerned. “His thought was, We’re a ‘public’ broadcasting station. Why are we way up in a building where no one can see us?” Folger recalls. “Before, they could have been shooting anywhere. There was no connection to the city.” Now, Broadway is visible through the glass, and passersby have an unobstructed view in.

WNET again traded space for functionality at the new headquarters, stillin Midtown. Tore locate staff from215,000 square feet to less than half that size—at nearly half the rent—A+I took “open” to the extreme, going from 70 percent private offices to zero. Even Shapiro sits at a workstation. In return, employees get support spaces such as a surround sound 3-D screening room and WiFi-equipped break-out areas. “In the end, what was considered a bad thing, belt tightening, turned out to be the key to unlocking the station’s future,” Zizmor says. Among the few reminders of the old, analog setup are the classic posters hung in the halls.



Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

Talkback
Related Content
Advertisement
More Content
  • Photos

On the Horizon for K&B: Studium

Designed by Milan-based art director Alex Turco for Studium, these durable yet thin (5mm) panels are manufactured on sheets of aluminum measuring up to 10 by 5 feet in size. +read article

Young Spanish Designers on the Rise

Energy surged at the Feria Hábitat Valencia last week when visitors entered NUDE 2012, a special annual exhibit devoted to promising young designers from Spain.
+read article

How Did We Get Here? NYC Skyline Through the Centuries

New York City is known for a lot of things, but above all it's famous for its skyline. Here we look at the city's transformation from the 1770s to a futuristic look at 2020. +read article