Entries in Camera Club (8)

Brit Photographers Get Intimidated Too


There's an interesting article in the Torygraph about photographers in the UK being harassed by all manner of security personnel. In April 2006, I took the above picture of the 2012 Olympic construction, which is now policed -- overzealously, it would seem -- by the Orwellian-sounding Olympic Delivery Authority. My old home town of Ipswich gets a mention in the article: A photographer there got hassled for taking pictures of Christmas crowds. Then there's the good citizen that called 999 (911) on a photographer-blogger for taking pictures in a park.

One apparent difference between the US and Britain: If you have a camera round your neck in public in the UK ,you are more likely assumed to be a pedophile than a terrorist.

Posted on Wednesday, August 20, 2008 at 12:03PM by Registered CommenterBIB in , , , | CommentsPost a Comment

Atlantic Yards Camera Club Part 2: The Atlantic Center Incident

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Norman Oder (right) has been trying to get an explanation from the police as to why we were removed from the Atlantic Center plaza, during the Build It Now rally. There's an update on Atlantic Yards Report today.

The AYR blog also ran an open invitation from Delia Hunley-Adossa, chair of the Community Benefits Agreement (CBA) Executive Committee, for people to take pictures at tomorrow's FCR organised rally:

"...this will be an excellent opportunity to come out to a FREE event... FREE food and give-away's. Get a chance to meet some celebrity basketball players from the NETS... and take pictures... and enjoy the day."
(Our emphasis)

AY Camera Club will try and make it to Borough Hall tomorrow and hope that the police have been briefed by the CBA that they want photographers at the event.

Atlantic Yards Camera Club Part 1: Blip TV

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Blip TV filmed Tracy Collins and myself around the Atlantic Yards footprint this afternoon. While we were there I took some shots from the sidewalk and was told by a security guard I could not be there. Has FCR snapped up Dean Street?

Posted on Wednesday, June 4, 2008 at 03:31PM by Registered CommenterBIB in , , , | CommentsPost a Comment

Atlantic Yards Aerial Photos: Interview with Jonathan Barkey

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Jonathan Barkey, Atlantic Yards Camera Club member, recently got to fly over the project area. We spoke to him to find out how he captured these dramatic images.

How did you get to take a helicopter ride around the footprint?

The Municipal Art Society of New York commissioned an architectural team to generate new renderings of the Atlantic Yards project reflecting developer Bruce Ratner's recent admission to The New York Times that most construction will be postponed due to financing issues and the slowing economy. I participated in extensive group e-mail exchanges with MAS that led to the choice of shooting angles and ultimately, their decision to photograph the site from the air.

Why not use shots from The Williamsburgh Savings Bank or other tall structures around the footprint?

Believe me, everyone involved tried hard to get good photos from nearby buildings, since helicopters are really expensive. When MAS asked for existing images, I sent them a panorama I'd taken last year from a rooftop on Flatbush across from the "Miss Brooklyn" and arena sites; it was clearly too close but, at least, good for context.


More Atlantic Yards Pictures 

 

Atlantic Yards Flickr Pool


BIB Atlantic Yards Posts


Not Another Blog


Atlantic Yards Webcam


No Land Grab


Atlantic Yards Report


Jonathan Barkey

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The Williamsburgh Savings Bank offers amazing views from its higher floors, but the angle isn't quite right, and Forest City's own Atlantic Terminal office building blocks key parts of the site. MAS also tried rooftop views from State Street and farther down Atlantic Avenue, neither of which offered acceptable proximity or height. I championed the idea of shooting from the Vanderbilt Avenue end—to show most effectively what would likely become a massive parking lot stretching west toward the arena. That's the most shocking of the two views used in the MAS renderings, and the reason the website can be called "Atlantic Lots."

1779590-1606031-thumbnail.jpgTo help MAS, local photographer Tracy Collins, who has been methodically documenting the Atlantic Yards footprint and adjoining neighborhood, tried shooting from two different rooftop sites overlooking that block but they just weren't tall enough. See the image, left.



How flexible was the pilot in terms of getting you the angles you needed?


He went exactly where we directed him, but said 500 feet was the minimum altitude possible. With four people in the helicopter and strong winds that day, he wasn't able to hover, so we made wide, slow circles around the site, descending to about six hundred feet in eight consecutive passes. I remember telling the pilot to get closer and closer, particularly at the Vanderbilt end, for maximum visual impact.

1779590-1606943-thumbnail.jpgWhat equipment did you take? Did you have any special lenses or filters?

I used a Canon EOS 40D digital SLR and a 17-55mm f/2.8 image-stabilized lens. Stabilization, which reduces blur caused by camera shake, was necessary to counteract the strong vibrations from the helicopter. For good measure, I set a fast shutter speed—1/1000th second. Otherwise, no special equipment. I shot from the back seat out the right side of the aircraft, with the door removed to facilitate photography. As I've discovered during several such flights, it's crucial that the photographer get the best seat; having someone sitting between you and the door or window makes the job much harder.

Did you have specific instructions from the people producing the 3D mock ups for the shoot?

Based on the pre-shoot brainstorming, MAS decided in advance that they were going to produce two renderings: one from the west with the arena block in the foreground, and the other from the east highlighting the "parking lot block" stretching from Vanderbilt to Carlton. Real-time shooting decisions in the air were based on my instincts and familiarity with the site. Time over the AY footprint was exactly 20 minutes. I captured about 120 separate images, of which MAS selected the best two.

What are your thoughts on the project now that it has been scaled back?

The project can hardly be described as "scaled back," despite the developer's decision to lop 109 feet off the top of "Miss Brooklyn" (Building 1), a token concession first announced in 2006. Why? Because the rest of the plan is roughly the same, including its massive, neighborhood-killing size. But nobody actually believes anything but the arena and a few towers will be built any time soon.

It looks like a huge empty lot down there. Surely some development is better than that?

This tragic circumstance, resulting from the malfeasance of city and state government enabling a developer-driven process with no meaningful input from residents and elected representatives, allowed Forest City Ratner to demolish much of the neighborhood even though the full build-out was always a sham. That's why a coalition of groups, now supported by local politicians who once favored the project, are petitioning Governor Paterson to call a "time-out" on further demolitions. Most people who oppose Atlantic Yards want to see development over the Vanderbilt rail yards—done responsibly and in true partnership with the community. A good start would be the community-driven UNITY Plan, a sensible framework that rejects lunatic scale, superblocks, egregious architecture, obscene public giveaways, and eminent domain abuse.

Who else has done independent renderings of the Atlantic Yards project?

The MAS project has many antecedents. My own efforts followed pioneering work by Jon Keegan (in the form of a Google Earth model) and Will James. The Environmental Simulation Center created both stills and a Google Earth model for the Council of Brooklyn Neighborhoods. Other visualizations appeared in New York Magazine.

 

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Jonathan Barkey is an editor for American PHOTO magazine and lives in Brooklyn.

Two Rallies at Atlantic Yards

400_2008_DSC_4986.jpgOne Saturday, two rallies at the Atlantic Yards site: one calling for Ratner's project to go forward, the other for it to stop. I would have come back with more shots of the friendly atmosphere at the start of the pro-project rally, but it began on private property where I was not permitted to take pictures. Persons with notepads are likewise unauthorized to enter Atlantic Terminal Plaza.

For more detailed coverage:
Atlantic Yards Report

Atlantic Yards Flickr Pool

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An Eye On Atlantic Yards

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The pace of demolition work around the AY footprint continues to step up,
even though most of the proposed construction has been put on hold.
Atlantic Yards Camera Club has set up a web cam so you can see the
destruction in progress. You can also join the rally to call a halt to the
demolitions tomorrow (Saturday, May 3) on Pacific and Carlton at 2pm.

Atlantic Yards Camera Club: Public Panic

1779590-1376043-thumbnail.jpgOur friend and Atlantic Yards photographer, Tracy Collins (pictured), was harassed by a member of the public whilst taking pictures of Carlton Avenue Bridge. You can read about the encounter here.

Posted on Thursday, February 28, 2008 at 04:07PM by Registered CommenterBIB in , , , | Comments1 Comment | References1 Reference
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