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November 10, 2005

Is Seattle ready to slim down its residential towers?

  • New zoning is expected to pass next year that will allow skinny residential buildings up to 400 feet tall downtown.
  • By BLAINE WEBER
    Weber + Thompson

    Photo
    Image courtesy Sienna Architects
    The Second + Pine building was designed under the old code. It will be 240 feet tall and about 230 feet wide. Floor plates will average about 22,000 square feet.

    Seattle is about to witness a new generation of tall and slender residential towers thanks to a revolutionary zoning code, revived appreciation for density in our urban center and an influx of buyers eager to embrace in-city living.

    Density is a big deal

    The city of Vancouver, B.C., gets it. Thankfully, Mayor Greg Nickels, the Seattle City Council and the Director of the Department of Planning and Development also appear to get it: The importance of zoning that encourages higher density and more open space in our urban center.

    A revolutionary Seattle zoning code amendment, expected to pass early next year, will encourage taller, more slender, and more environmentally friendly high-rise residential structures. More importantly, this new code is expected to bring more density to downtown Seattle.

    Why is density such a big deal?

    The lifeblood of a city is the pedestrians who enjoy its public spaces. Density is a powerful tool that brings more pedestrians to the city streets. Pedestrians feed businesses, restaurants, art galleries, cultural and entertainment venues, and even the city's tax base.

    Simply put, pedestrians activate the public realm, bringing vitality and reducing crime.

    In the bigger picture, bringing more residents downtown where infrastructure is already mature helps reduce unbridled growth outside the urban center. Meeting the goals of the Growth Management Act and curbing the environmental degradation caused by urban sprawl won't happen without it.

    Why tall and slender?

    The current zoning code essentially mandates shorter, wider and bulkier buildings than those found in Vancouver, B.C., for example. Taller, slender towers with condensed floor plates are visually lighter and more elegant. These slender towers cast less shadow, allow more air and light back down to the pedestrian zone, and create a more graceful city skyline.

    Zoning code revolution

    Photo
    Image courtesy Weber + Thompson Architects
    Fifteen Twenty-One Second Avenue will be Seattle's first 400-foot-tall residential tower. It will be less than 120 feet wide and floor plates will average 10,700 square feet.

    The code amendment under review by the Seattle City Council is not expected to pass until the first quarter of 2006, but here are some of the key issues under consideration for the downtown mixed commercial (DMC) zone where most of these towers will proliferate:

    Building height increased

    Current allowed height in most of the DMC zones is 240 feet. The new code will allow a new height of 400 feet, but with a price. In order to achieve the additional height, these new taller towers must have smaller, condensed floor plates, restricted by size (square footage of the plate), façade length and setback.

    Floor plates downsized

    Under current zoning, floor plates are not restricted in size. It is theoretically possible for a developer to bundle an entire block's worth of lots into a mega-site and develop a project with unrestricted floor plates. Recently completed projects such as the Cristalla condominiums have floor plates in the range of 15,000 square feet, while the new zoning code restricts floor plates to an average of 10,700 square feet and a maximum of 11,600 square feet.

    Facade length restricted?

    Current DMC zoning does not restrict the length of façades on structures with floor plates under 15,000 square feet. The new code suggests restricting façade lengths to 80 percent of lot widths across the board — although the council is encouraged to replace the percentage limitations with a maximum width of 120 feet. (This is the minimum width that allows for practical sized residential units surrounding the large structural shear core required in taller structures.) This will also encourage four-sided structures that minimize the likelihood of blank side walls.


    A tale of two towers
    In order to fully appreciate the prospective impacts of this new code, it is necessary to compare various projects designed under the new and old zoning codes. Two new projects to be constructed downtown are contrasted to demonstrate how these new codes influence design of a tower — with very different results.

    Second + Pine
    Second + Pine is a mixed-use project designed under current zoning rules, to be developed by Portland’s Paul Brenneke. Slated to begin construction in early 2006, plans call for premium condos above a luxury hotel, health club, flagship retailers and a world-class restaurant.
    According to Brenneke’s architect, Lee Winn of Sienna Architects, the project required significant redesigning when the proposed monorail’s path snipped the northwest corner of the site.
    “We considered reworking the plans for a 400-foot concept under new zoning guidelines but this project has an aggressive schedule so the decision was made to move forward under current regulations,” says Winn.
    Second + Pine will cover most of the block between Stewart and Pine. The façade on Second Avenue will be 240 feet tall and approximately 230 feet wide, with floor plates of approximately 22,000 square feet.
    “We’re big proponents for the revised zoning,” says Winn. “By example, under the new guidelines Fifteen Twenty–One Second Avenue is proposed as a mid-block development with taller, more slender massing and is far more sympathetic to our light and views. The new zoning makes for better neighbors, a better skyline and ultimately a better city.”

    Fifteen Twenty-One Second Avenue
    Fifteen Twenty-One will be Seattle’s first 400-foot-tall residential tower.
    Designed under the new zoning code by Weber + Thompson for OPUS/Samis, the 143-unit project will be located on Second Avenue, mid-block between Pike and Pine streets, and kitty-corner from Brenneke’s Second and Pine project. It is a good example of the taller and more slender towers to come.
    The proposed project is 400 feet tall and less than 120 feet wide, with average floor plates of 10,700 square feet.
    According to developer William Justen of Samis, “The mayor’s Center City initiative and the height and density code amendment have been developed to promote a vibrant downtown and encourage much more residential development. The development encouraged by the code amendment will bring tremendous new investment and revitalization to many pedestrian linkages downtown. The proposed zoning changes require smaller floor plates and spacing between towers that will allow more sunlight at the pedestrian level on our streets. This project will be the first residential tower to demonstrate the real value of going tall and slender under the new code amendment.”

    — Blaine Weber

    Setbacks unrestricted

    There are no actual setbacks in the existing or proposed zoning code; however, the International Building Code does restrict the location of unprotected openings, establishing setbacks based on construction type and percentage of vision glass versus rated walls. These setbacks can vary with air rights agreements between adjacent property owners, but will provide desired transparency on all sides of new residential towers.

    Tower spacing restricted

    The new code will mandate spacing between towers above an elevation of 125 feet. Seattle has never restricted the location of a building on private property based on the adjacency of other structures; however, there is legal precedence in other cities for this restriction. This policy will help to ensure openness, light and air to the street.

    Transparency unrestricted?

    This item is controversial and may be eliminated. The draft amendment requires towers to provide a minimum of 75 percent transparency (as opposed to solid or opaque walls) in an effort to minimize the unfriendly blank side walls often adorning new towers. The idea is to ensure eye-appealing facades on all four sides of a building. This transparency requirement matches IBC requirements based on the same 75 percent allowance for unprotected openings with a setback of 15 to 20 feet. While this would preclude blank facades, it would also preclude projects on smaller sites that choose to provide 25 percent or 40 percent openings. Better design and more development opportunities will occur if this restriction is encouraged but not prescribed.

    Sustainability

    The new code requires that projects must achieve basic LEED certification in order to secure additional height. This requirement is a bold move on the part of the mayor and City Council. Many visionary developers like William Justen, Tom Parsons and Greg Smith are embracing this move with enthusiasm. There will be a demonstrable payback to our environment in the long term, and many condominium buyers are demanding — and are willing to pay extra for — sustainable design, affording some payback in the short term as well.

    Affordable housing

    An affordable housing requirement will likely be part of the new code — achieved either by providing affordable units in a given project, or by making a payment-in-lieu toward the city's low-income housing fund. This is an example of the tricky balance between encouraging new housing development downtown and adding to the cost of doing so.

    Recreation space

    The current code requires that area equivalent to 5 percent of a building's residential area be allocated as recreation space for residents. Half may be provided internally; the other half must be provided as outdoor recreation space on rooftop gardens. Achieving this amount of rooftop area is a challenge in a 240-foot-tall tower and finding the additional area in larger towers is almost impossible. This is because taller buildings require more mechanical rooftop area; and, when compounded by smaller floor plates, the problem is magnified. The new code amendment will likely adjust this percentage to a figure that is proportional to a taller tower. It appears the new code will also allow for payment-in-lieu, such that equivalent recreation space can be transferred to nearby parks and open space. This has the added benefit of creating public open space that can be enjoyed by all — as opposed to only by the residents of a given tower.


    Blaine Weber, AIA, is a founding partner of Weber + Thompson, an architecture and interior design firm specializing in large mixed-use and high-rise residential structures. Weber is the chair of the Downtown Design Review Board.


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