No more bridge...
>>A pedestrian connector that had been included in original renderings of John Hancock's planned 388-foot Back Bay tower did not appear in the tower's design review Tuesday evening.
http://www.bizjournals.com/boston/r...ncock-nixes-pedestrian-connector-on-back.html
The BCDC praised the design team's creativity in creating a tower on a small mid-block site but encouraged them to think in more detail about the building's top as it had with the ground level.
Andrea Leers, a BCDC commissioner and founding principal of architecture firm Leers Weinzapfel Associates Architects Inc., said the tower's top had the look of a "slightly Star Trek-ish looking pod up there."
"I'm being playful," she continued, "but the top of the building warrants as much thinking and looking as the bottom. … There's something that seems not as elegant as the bottom right now."
Is it just me or is the BCDC becoming more involved than it used to be? I've been on this forum for over three years now and it seems like only recently have I been seeing the name "BCDC" come up with such regularity. What I'm saying is that, even though so much has gotten approved in the past three years, I've only seen the BCDC get involved in most if not all projects in the past couple months. Is this a new improvement to the system from the Mayor's office?
Interesting that people at the Clarendon aren't freaking out/suing to stop development like 40 trinity pl.
Wow, the lobby of the JH proposal looks like a 60's space-age airport terminal entrance and the roof thing and overall shape of the building makes it look like a paper shredder.
Most NYC residents accept the fact that they live in a city, but there is a growing minority screaming about shadows on Central Park in the dead of winter from new towers going up around there as well.Ok, how does NYC build highrises next to parks like in the pic above? (I believe that's Bryant Park). No shadow laws in NYC?
1095 Avenue of the Americas in Manhattan (Blue building on the left). Yes the color is similar to the Hancock (I would develop with a darker tint, more navy blue), but I think this type of building is what we need in this spot. Funny thing is that this building is 644 feet with the added portion to the top! Obviously this design is shorter.
Much like the Boston Garden, I get the frustration that this isn't taller, but I'm just not seeing what's so ugly about it. It's interesting, and the top will stick out a bit when viewed from the Common.
Gotta say, featureless blue box. We've got plenty of those. The Hancock does the look much better, because Cobb brilliantly used a trapezoidal footprint.
Much like the Boston Garden, I get the frustration that this isn't taller, but I'm just not seeing what's so ugly about it. It's interesting, and the top will stick out a bit when viewed from the Common.
My point with the pure rectangle is that it fits Stuart street. The rounded Space Ship doesn't. I consider myself a traditionalist, and think it would look better.
Keep it the same color as the Hancock III's draft design (silverish) and incorporate the roof into something more angled/unique. From that height (400 ft give or take) you've got a pretty good view SE.