I can't even begin to explain how utterly stupid this is. When will people realize, that the only way to meet the demand in the city is to build UP. New York understood it. Why can't Boston? In a few months we will probably hear how they will not build an underground garage instead.
Welcome to Boston, where you can try to build a tower but you will probably be blocked.
This isn't NYC
or even Philly/SF.
urban mid-sized city.
Horray! There are no more shadows on the common anymore!!
/sarcasm
If I were the developer, I'd honestly give up by this point. I don't see how this is a feasible building now, with it costing $55 million for 12 stories. Wasn't the original design something like 1 unit/floor? There's no way, (that I can see), where you can turn a profit with this.
Fact of the matter is that Boston is a major metropolitan area. Is it a mega-city like New York? Of course not, but by any meaningful statistical measure (no, square miles and population within the city limits are not meaningful for anything other than the history of political amalgamation) Boston is big.
This conversation is always popular in the Archboston Circle of Life. Can someone automate this response?
Well in fairness, Boston is Boston. This isn't NYC, Chicago or even Philly/SF. Boston has a lot of things going for it. It has a world class university system, a solid innovation economy, historical architecture, and a truly unique character. I used to wish Boston was bigger. But, it is what it is. I'm only setting myself up for disappointment. It isn't designed to be a "big city". It will always be a solidly urban mid-sized city. Really, nothing wrong with it.
Weigh,
No sir. Do that over 36, 48, 60 months.
i bet the number is closer to 4,000-6,000 units per year. We're still losing ground to many peer cities.
Not to distract further. But, just wanted to respond as I didn't make my point too well. I wasn't trying to make the Manahattanization argument. I was just point out that Boston is an old established city with a relatively built out "mixed use core." This is a pretty steady as she goes type of city with reguard to development. I would like to see more development in Boston and wish this was taller. But, we can't be too suprised/dissapointed this happened.
I love Boston, although I wish it had a little more of a rip roaring "big city feel." Boston is a fantastic city even though it isn't a city that whole heartedly embrages growth as much as it could. In fact, maybe glass half full, I have come to appreciate that as part of its charm.
Agree with you 100%. Boston is what it is. Much of it charming (though most of its contemporary architecture is dime-a-dozen). That's okay--it's thoroughly walkable, has some inimitable academic and cultural institutions, coziness and, yes, even a handful of nice, tall buildings. But it will not be a 24-hour city in any of our lifetimes nor have a dynamic skyline. Most of us can live with that. Let's celebrate the few great buildings we have and stop with the idiotic tower-envy. We just don't compete on that turf.
Weigh,
No sir. Do that over 36, 48, 60 months.
i bet the number is closer to 4,000-6,000 units per year. We're still losing ground to many peer cities.