The hotel should be replaced, but a squat hulking landscaper just ain't what the doctor ordered. I'm happy this proposal failed, and hopefully they find a LOT more inspiration whenever they do go back to the drawing board.
What does this mean?Funny how the housing crunch evaporates when certain people don’t get their way.
Yeah, the one long landscraper wall depicted above needs to be broken up by a few cross-streets, or at least alleys, and some variable height, including a couple of talls, thrown in the mix. This need seems so elementary and obvious, it makes me wonder why the city can't vet proposals in a way that would encourage it.It would either need to be a proposal with multiple buildings or break it up into multiple lots.
What does this mean?
It means our resident Steven Miller impersonator cares more about development meeting his personal aesthetic standard than accepting the trade off of a marginally less than perfect development having meaningful impact on the challenges the city’s facing with regard to housing and dramatically improving a long and depressing block.
It's not perfect, but I don't see anything wrong with it. We need the housing and not all buildings need to be perfect.The hotel should be replaced, but a squat hulking landscaper just ain't what the doctor ordered. I'm happy this proposal failed, and hopefully they find a LOT more inspiration whenever they do go back to the drawing board.
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I suppose if that was ever still possible in this day and age it would be here where the land is owned by a non-profit/church, and thus they could decide that is in their best interests. I'd think, however, even here the best that could be hoped for is pseudo breaks in the facade to simulate different buildings in the mega-block akin to Assembly Square and other developments, unfortunately.It would either need to be a proposal with multiple buildings or break it up into multiple lots.
The utility of cross-streets is diminished by the geometry of the abutting block of long rowhouses:Yeah, the one long landscraper wall depicted above needs to be broken up by a few cross-streets, or at least alleys, and some variable height, including a couple of talls, thrown in the mix. This need seems so elementary and obvious, it makes me wonder why the city can't vet proposals in a way that would encourage it.
I like the landscraper.The hotel should be replaced, but a squat hulking landscaper just ain't what the doctor ordered. I'm happy this proposal failed, and hopefully they find a LOT more inspiration whenever they do go back to the drawing board.
Faking the appearance of multiple building with facade gimmicks never works. I personally find it to be insulting.I suppose if that was ever still possible in this day and age it would be here where the land is owned by a non-profit/church, and thus they could decide that is in their best interests. I'd think, however, even here the best that could be hoped for is pseudo breaks in the facade to simulate different buildings in the mega-block akin to Assembly Square and other developments, unfortunately.
I'm happy this proposal failed, and hopefully they find a LOT more inspiration whenever they do go back to the drawing board.
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I’M NOT!
Thanks for reminding me what was lost, though!
That was the best design for a new building here.
It means our resident Steven Miller impersonator cares more about development meeting his personal aesthetic standard than accepting the trade off of a marginally less than perfect development having meaningful impact on the challenges the city’s facing with regard to housing and dramatically improving a long and depressing block.
I have to come back at you one more time. I guess this development isn't happening because I didn't like it. Apparently my opinion has the power to get things cancelled. Who knew? Plus, this was the singular development to end our housing crisis, right at the top of the pipeline. Now the crisis will never end because this one development got shelved. Is that how things work in the La La Land that you inhabit?
If this building matters so much to you, then fund it yourself. Isn't that what you like to say? Go get a loan and get it built. Stop crying and start acting. There's a local housing crisis that only you can solve.