It looks very reminiscent of the New York skyline in the early twentieth century....no flat-topped buildings.
Like this:
picture posted by Troyeth on Wired New York.
Most of above pix from New York in Black and White.
Except for 2IFC, the buildings don't actually seem to really enlarge the skyline. It oddly doesn't look any more impressive than what is there currently, which shows to me that Boston's skyline is already actually pretty good.
i disagree. it took me a couple mins to confirm that it was in fact boston. i think this looks great ablarc, a big improvement over the 500 ft "skyline" boston currently has
Harkens back to colonial days, when Boston?s skyline was punctuated with spires.
Actually, when we react to a skyline, we?re assessing
scale or
relative size, not absolute magnitude. In other words, we?re comparing the size of things. So it?s the size
disparity between buildings that makes us feel awe at the size of the big ones.
This is illustrated by the following two pictures taken fifty years apart from the Empire State Building:
Though there are far more tall buildings in the second shot, they don?t stand out. Hence no
mysterium tremendum.
You can?t see how much bigger they are than other things because they?re all in the company of other similar-sized things: buildings of about the same height (including almost all the ones in the earlier photo, which still exist). The problem is compounded by the fact that glass flattops deprive you of the scale markings that punched windows provide to denote floors.
And so, your brain --always seeking the simplest explanation for what the eye sees-- chooses to interpret the second image as smaller objects closer to the vantage point. Do you see how the skyscrapers in the second view appear to be closer? That's what also makes them seem smaller. (If they're closer to you and take up the same field of vision, the brain reasons, they must be smaller.)
Above two photos posted by Derek2K3, Wired New York.
Oh, look! THERE'S the "World-Class" city that Menino keeps talking about. If only.....
Well, from a distance it looks almost as impressive as Manila or Panama City.
Ablarc, you must have stumbled into a wormhole to an alternate universe. In Boston's real future, the Shadow Law succeeds and the Boston skyline is flattened. Even the grasshopper atop Faneuil Hall gets melted down to build a golden community drinking fountain on the Ned Flaherty Memorial Mass Pike Greenway.
LOL!!
Ditch the lame London Eye ripoff and I'm cool with this.
Yeah, I did this a while ago, and would probably omit the wheel today.
Do we have an original photo for comparison?
Thank you, Mike.
Fine by me, but I didn?t take the photo; all I did was doctor it, so most of it isn?t mine. And I forget where I got it (probably on the old SkyscraperGuy Forum). Maybe you?ll get lucky and the photographer will materialize on this forum. :flash:
I bet it's Mike.
The only thing worth looking at in that photo is the QE2. You have far too much free time on your hands.
You?re probably right on both counts; I?m sure some folks? wives concur on the second point.
Doubtless it would be too kind to refer to us forumers as even
flaneurs, particularly since we?re
virtual flaneurs at best, impotent, pitiful babblers --mere wraiths of the internet, phantasms?
Maybe you could call us
flamers.
I, for one, am very grateful you took the time to do this.
Thanks, it didn?t even take an hour; but I think kmp is right: I should find better things to do with my time.