Actually, despite all the parking garages the parking ratio is only slightly above standard for suburban buildings, if my bad eyes are reading that blurry site plan correctly.
909,320 square feet of office space
66,844 square feet of retail space
4,482 parking spaces
(I'm skipping the apartments because the parking spaces are not listed but also they will be designated specifically for the residents)
Traditionally, suburban office buildings must have 4 spaces per 1,000 square feet of office space to be competitive. Office tenants want at least that much, and tech and call center tenants want 5 or 6 spaces per 1,000 square feet because they squeeze more bodies into less square footage when they lease space. At the above numbers, if you combine the office & retail, that 4,482 parking space total equals 4.6 spaces per 1,000 square feet. However if some or all of those blurry 6's on the retail buildings are actually blurry 8's or 9's then the total retal square footage goes up and that parking ratio goes down to 4 spaces per 1,000 square feet or slightly under. To be fair, retail parking ratios are counted differently than office, but that's too much math for a Monday afternoon.
That's going to be one ugly stroll down Executive Center Drive with all those tall parking garages exposed out in the open like that. Hopefully they'll grow some vines up the side or put some planters on them or something.