Planning board discusses, approves tower
Business First of Buffalo - 11:51 AM EST Tuesday by James Fink Business First
The Buffalo Planning Board Tuesday gave the green light to concept plans and designs for a proposed 40-story office tower in downtown Buffalo.
The board's unanimous approval is the first of many steps that must be taken before construction on the $360 million, privately-financed project can begin. It does, however, mark the first time since the tower was announced in mid-October that a city agency has given the greenlight to any aspect of the project.
The tower is being proposed by English investor/developer Bashar Issa and will serve as a companion to his $80 million restoration of the historic Statler Towers.
The proposed tower will feature a mix of Class A office space, condominiums, retail, hotel and some entertainment space. It is slated for the corner of S. Elmwood Avenue and Mohawk Street, just a few blocks from Buffalo City Hall. At 593 feet tall, the tower will be the tallest structure in either Buffalo or Niagara Falls.
The approval came following a brief public hearing held Tuesday morning by the agency. While most praised the project, some raised questions about the tower's height and related environmental impact and the decidedly upscale bent of its residential condominiums, where some units may have price tags approaching the high six-figure range.
Planning board member Susan Curran Hoyt, reiterated her feelings from a Jan. 2 hearing, where she felt the tower was too tall and out of scale with the rest of downtown Buffalo. Hoyt said she would prefer it if the building were 75 feet shorter.
"True, it is a tall building by Buffalo's standards," said design principal Harry Warren from Grand Island's Cannon Design . Cannon is the project's architect. "But, we are making this an icon for today."
The building's 40 stories and nearly 600-foot tall structure is well within the city's zoning ordinances, noted Frank Manuele, planning board chairman.
"Remember some of the icon buildings in the town -- that includes Buffalo City Hall -- were considered out of scale at the time when they were built," said Cynthia Schwartz, another Buffalo Planning Board member. "Some of the buildings we love the most today, were considered out of scale at the time (they were built)."
Warren said an environmental impact study will take between six and eight months to complete and construction won't start for at least two years.
Issa has previously said he won't begin construction on the 1.1 million-square-foot complex until it is at least 40 percent under contract, either through office, residential or a committed hotel -- or combination of the three.
If construction begins within the next two years, Warren said the entire tower could be completed by 2011.
http://buffalo.bizjournals.com/buffa...ml?jst=b_ln_hl