Seaport Neighborhood - Infill and Discussion

Looks like a poor attempt at a Frank Gehry type style:

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Wandered around the Seaport a few days before Christmas after landing at Logan but before heading south to B’water and the family
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Gotta say, I was so happily surprised, yet again, by the changes, the much added retail and food spots, the activity (in spite of the 23 degrees), the everything that makes the Seaport an amazing section of the city!
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Just noticed Massport put out an RFP for parcel D3, temporary use instead of the hotel that was originally being discussed.
[Massport has] asked for bids to turn the site into an “activation” that could draw regional and national visitors, over a five- to 15-year period as they wait out the moribund development market. Proposals are due by the end of the business day on Friday.
 
I've traveled to nearly all of the key cities in the country, and I don't think I've seen such a large grouping of buildings all stopped at about the same height as it does in the Seaport District. And that goes for D.C. too, though it used to be a limit of around 12-14 stories there.
 
I've traveled to nearly all of the key cities in the country, and I don't think I've seen such a large grouping of buildings all stopped at about the same height as it does in the Seaport District. And that goes for D.C. too, though it used to be a limit of around 12-14 stories there.
Yeah, it is rather odd as a skyline element, though the FAA makes it impossible to achieve more varied height in that location. Fortunately, the street level is pretty good throughout most of the Seaport, which matters a lot more to me than how it looks from a distance.
 
I've traveled to nearly all of the key cities in the country, and I don't think I've seen such a large grouping of buildings all stopped at about the same height as it does in the Seaport District. And that goes for D.C. too, though it used to be a limit of around 12-14 stories there.
Here:
park-slope-brooklyn.jpg


And here:
upward-tilting-drone-shot-of-streetcar-on-market-street-in-san-francisco.jpg


And here:
aerial-view-of-the-franch-quarter-new-orleans-la-usa-R83104.jpg


And, oh yeah, here:

SouthEndAerial_KyleKleinKKP_0544_db782a8a-0307-4e15-97ca-59cbd3011084.jpg


And it's not a coincidence that, from the standpoint of good urbanism, these are some the very best neighborhoods in the country. Height doesn't make a good city -- and when it comes with giant footprints, loading docks, less variety of uses, and dead streetwalls, it often ruins one.
 
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Here:
park-slope-brooklyn.jpg


And here:
upward-tilting-drone-shot-of-streetcar-on-market-street-in-san-francisco.jpg


And here:
aerial-view-of-the-franch-quarter-new-orleans-la-usa-R83104.jpg


And, oh yeah, here:

SouthEndAerial_KyleKleinKKP_0544_db782a8a-0307-4e15-97ca-59cbd3011084.jpg


And it's not a coincidence that, from the standpoint of good urbanism, these are some the very best neighborhoods in the country. Height doesn't make a good city -- and when it comes with giant footprints, loading docks, less variety of uses, and dead streetwalls, it often ruins one.

Okay....so the third pic is French quarter in New Orleans and the South End is obvious. At the risk of outing myself as a philistine, what are the first two. I'm thinking the second pic is San Francisco?
 
Here:
park-slope-brooklyn.jpg


And here:
upward-tilting-drone-shot-of-streetcar-on-market-street-in-san-francisco.jpg


And here:
aerial-view-of-the-franch-quarter-new-orleans-la-usa-R83104.jpg


And, oh yeah, here:

SouthEndAerial_KyleKleinKKP_0544_db782a8a-0307-4e15-97ca-59cbd3011084.jpg


And it's not a coincidence that, from the standpoint of good urbanism, these are some the very best neighborhoods in the country. Height doesn't make a good city -- and when it comes with giant footprints, loading docks, less variety of uses, and dead streetwalls, it often ruins one.
These examples all have hills, church steeples, miscellaneous taller municipal buildings, newer apartment blocks. etc. scattered throughout.

The Seaport cap is measured by altitude/elevation above sea level (practically to the foot!) and not by height, so topography doesn't matter and you end up with a 100% flat plain of roofs. There's also a huge difference between "we only build most buildings to three stories because we haven't yet invented elevators or cranes" and "we build to 110'2" (or whatever...) Above Mean Sea Level, exactly." Here, areas like Downtown DC and the Navy Yard are maybe the closest comp, but even they have exceptions.

And yeah, of course height doesn't make a good city. But the Seaport's haircut still makes it quite remarkable globally, and a hypothetical alternative world where the post-GFC Seaport building boom happened without FAA height limitations is a very interesting one to ponder! The capital, demand, and technology were all aligned for serious height there, plus the area is far enough from the Public Garden / Common / etc. to take the shadow worries off the table. My guess is that it would have ended up more like Downtown Jersey City than what it does now.
 

Development Team Files LOI for RLFMP Parcel U Project​

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“After being selected in 2023 to develop Parcel U at the Raymond L. Flynn Marine Park, Lincoln Property Company and Quaker Lane have now filed a Letter of Intent outlining plans for a new nine-story, 181,240-square-foot mixed-use building. The proposal calls for demolishing the existing on-site structure and replacing it with a modern facility designed to support office/lab users, alongside a dedicated, two-level, single-company station for the Boston Fire Department. The ground floor would feature the fire station with an accessory café/co-working space, positioning the development as a hybrid hub for industrial, civic, and innovation-focused uses.”

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Development Team Files LOI for RLFMP Parcel U Project​

Seaport_Parcel_U.png

“After being selected in 2023 to develop Parcel U at the Raymond L. Flynn Marine Park, Lincoln Property Company and Quaker Lane have now filed a Letter of Intent outlining plans for a new nine-story, 181,240-square-foot mixed-use building. The proposal calls for demolishing the existing on-site structure and replacing it with a modern facility designed to support office/lab users, alongside a dedicated, two-level, single-company station for the Boston Fire Department. The ground floor would feature the fire station with an accessory café/co-working space, positioning the development as a hybrid hub for industrial, civic, and innovation-focused uses.”

parcel_U_LPC_%281%29.png



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Would the city own the fire station? I ask because the city of Somerville is currently trying to rectify its poor decision to rent a fire station in Assembly Row 5 years ago.
 

Development Team Files LOI for RLFMP Parcel U Project​

Seaport_Parcel_U.png

“After being selected in 2023 to develop Parcel U at the Raymond L. Flynn Marine Park, Lincoln Property Company and Quaker Lane have now filed a Letter of Intent outlining plans for a new nine-story, 181,240-square-foot mixed-use building. The proposal calls for demolishing the existing on-site structure and replacing it with a modern facility designed to support office/lab users, alongside a dedicated, two-level, single-company station for the Boston Fire Department. The ground floor would feature the fire station with an accessory café/co-working space, positioning the development as a hybrid hub for industrial, civic, and innovation-focused uses.”

parcel_U_LPC_%281%29.png



View attachment 71988
Surprised to see this moving forward since 2 Harbor still appears to be empty.
 

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