Yes, Boston, where the sun is in the Northern sky so often.
And seriously, if one great wide lane of park is not enough and you need diagonals too, why let anything get built, they'll always crimp out your view.
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Yea theres really not much info out there about this particular project, even on the bpda website. Its hard to tell exactly what was approved and it never really says anything about the particular proposal and if this is what were getting. Because of the lack of info the only other site I could find is construction journal linked in the first post that says construction is starting early 23’, but who knows if thats definitely the case. The bpda site does say it is approved, but I have the same questions you have due to the lack of info to be found out there. Usually there is more documentation that would be up on the site showing the design process for the architecture and what has been changed etc to get to the current proposal. If anyone else can find more info feel free to post it here.
Yea theres really not much info out there about this particular project, even on the bpda website. Its hard to tell exactly what was approved and it never really says anything about the particular proposal and if this is what were getting. Because of the lack of info the only other site I could find is construction journal linked in the first post that says construction is starting early 23’, but who knows if thats definitely the case. The bpda site does say it is approved, but I have the same questions you have due to the lack of info to be found out there. Usually there is more documentation that would be up on the site showing the design process for the architecture and what has been changed etc to get to the current proposal. If anyone else can find more info feel free to post it here.Is this even a project? There was a change to the PDA made recently but AFAIK there is no actual proposal for this site (or there isn't one on the BPDA website or in the news). Does someone know more?
Yes, Boston, where the sun is in the Northern sky so often.
And seriously, if one great wide lane of park is not enough and you need diagonals too, why let anything get built, they'll always crimp out your view.
There's parks all along the waterfront! Putting in more large grassy fields does not equal parkland and at some point we need actual utilization of space. Let's not fetishize parks, but instead build great ones.Isn't this the same city where the intrinsic value of parkland for the public good has been so long-understood that it's legally codified that new developments in our densest downtown areas can't negatively impact even the light cast from the sun onto our central park?
I personally think that, especially given the canyon effect of the squat boxes of the seaport with no setbacks and uniform height, having 300' of waterfront public park space vs. 150' is indeed a meaningful difference.
There's parks all along the waterfront! Putting in more large grassy fields does not equal parkland and at some point we need actual utilization of space. Let's not fetishize parks, but instead build great ones.
I guess I find this entire conversation bizarre: the BPDA and developers have gone through multiple iterations of masterplans over decades and the building(s) here are long anticipated. And now there's a demand for more parkland in tight markets in a city with a housing crisis? We're going to have some great parks here (and already do!). I'd worry far more that the "park" on part of Parcel G and next door will be poorly used if not permanently shops and beergardens as they are now, rather like the adjacent one on Fan Pier is. There's so much good space for recreation there, the field by the water is exactly that.
Love the idea of something like the Merlion here in the Seaport somewhere, what would it be, a giant lobster perhaps? Too cheesy!I agree with FortPointer above, and I also follow you on Twitter by the way. It does seem like a TON of broken promises and missed opportunity with all these parks and public spaces. However, I was visiting SnowPort last week, and I really enjoyed it. It's a GREAT addition to Boston in the winter. Despite all these disconnected parks and crappy urban planning, it's still a cool area to visit.........and especially on a nice summer day.
My biggest complaint and thought on a missed opportunity are the steps on Fan Pier. They are OK, but I think this highly visible corner of Fan Pier should have something truly monumental and iconic for Boston. A lighthouse spurting a massive column of water into the harbor like the Merlion in Singapore? LOL I don't know exactly, but it needs something more than just a nice stairway for a photo opp. Even the cafe below seems underwhelming to me. In my opinion, even the Louis Boston shipping container was better.
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I actually like the steps a lot because the whole attraction here (besides taking selfies) is having an elevated place to just stand/sit for a minute and look at the ships in the harbor and admire the skyline. Its free, its pleasant, and it subtly nudges you without making it explicitly clear that (after you get your photo), put the phone away and just watch the boats go by for a few minutes. As far as Im concerned the more things there are that get us to stop for a minute and just enjoy the world as it is around us for a bit, the better.
Love the idea of something like the Merlion here in the Seaport somewhere, what would it be, a giant lobster perhaps? Too cheesy!
Haha, I think probably a bit too cheesy. Anything overtly too touristy or gimmicky looking would probably be too cheesy. I like the steps as well and agree with Justbuildit that the primary issue is with the restaurant downstairs failing to open.
What we have going on in Boston right now is as wonderful as any city. I live in hell, Manhattan, I mean. I travel throughout the contiguous US' largest cities and it makes me evermore proud of almost everything Boston has, does and is doing.
We nitpick, we complain about height from purely an aesthetic standpoint, but it is the everything in the bottom 50 feet that really drives the ethos. The cleanliness, the dichotomy of old and new, the compartmentalization of city neighborhoods in a cultural way creating uniqueness is unlike anywhere in this country. Seaport is nothing but a '+++'. The initial development there had to be 'boxes', many, in order to maximize return in an area constricted by height with no gentrification, to make it profitable for development. It is primarily the initial companies that are THE 'boxes' for the obvious point that in order to catalyze development of an area which had parking lots and nothing else, the risk outweighed the need to create something 'beautiful'.
Boston, coming off the 'Great Recession' was fortunate for Frank McCourt's dire financial situation or else we wouldn't be here, not here as it is. Even with that, it was hard to push development. The city has continued to build leverage for what they accept architecturally as the stages and phases continue. Further, they are getting these companies to pay for much of the urban development, parks, etc. I'm just proud and grateful, and I can't wait to move back.