"Meredith and Sample visualize alternate futures: street-level stores, once catering to luxury products and experiences, become collective and affordable apartments, community centers, libraries, and soup kitchens. Acknowledging the large-scale, structural problems of financialized real estate while proposing small-scale interventions, the designers don't pretend to have all the solutions, but rather aspire to take part in "a collective process of imagining a better city."" --Urban Omnibus
"What to do with New York's empty storefronts? HILARY SAMPLE, FAIA, and Michael Meredith, AIA--co-founders of the local firm MOS--tackle the question with vigor, painstakingly documenting long-discussed storefronts and proposing a suite of possible solutions aimed at enhancing the city's community and urban fabric." --Architect, The Journal of the American Institute of Architects
"Informative, thought-provoking, and a unique contribution to our on-going regional and national discussions with reference to urban planning and reversing urban decay, "Vacant Spaces NY" is especially and unreservedly recommended additions to professional, governmental, college, and university library Urban & Land Use Planning and Contemporary Architecture collections. It should be noted for the personal reading lists of architects, city planners, urban renewal activists, students, academics, and non-specialist general readers with an interest in the subject that "Vacant Spaces NY" is also readily available in a digital book format." --Midwest Book Review
"...the book is a critique of New York City's rampant, zoning-enabled, developer-driven, tear-down-and-build-up mentality, instead of saying that there are enough buildings but their spaces need to be filled in in better, more equitable ways. Though out of step with "big real estate's" insatiable thirst for luxury housing, it's an approach that is in step with the times and will most likely see more and more support as time marches on." --John Hill, A Daily Dose of Architecture