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www.archpaper.com/2025/03/dsr-mass-timber-boston-university/
www.archpaper.com/2025/03/dsr-mass-timber-boston-university/
Sure, let's revert back to BU Normal Architecture, masterpieces like the Warren Towers!Is BU determined to ruin Charles campus skyline with the horrendous Jenga building and now this, thing? They need to be told no! Go back to your room and come back when you have something normal please...
OK, John Silber.Is BU determined to ruin Charles campus skyline with the horrendous Jenga building and now this, thing? They need to be told no! Go back to your room and come back when you have something normal please...
While I don't 100% disagree, I will add that it's refreshing--dare I say exciting--to see a timber-frame high rise on the horizon. That and the conversion of another surface parking lot into an activated public realm improvement is promising to see.Is BU determined to ruin Charles campus skyline with the horrendous Jenga building and now this, thing? They need to be told no! Go back to your room and come back when you have something normal please...
The campus will benefit by having both buildings.I showed this to my young alumni friends and they don't like it. I think personally this is a great project just because it gets rid of that horrible lot and adds more space for students, which is huge.
At some point, it is worth asking why these institutions which have few financial constraints don't simply choose to build beautiful buildings. Because the average person knows what a beautiful building looks like when they see it. But architects and developers do not know. There's some kind of disconnect going on.
When I told my friend that the building was going to be for global studies, she said "I'd still rather work in this building" and sent me a photo of -- the current school of global studies building. Which is inexplicably more attractive than this thing!
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This was previously the admissions reception center. Hopefully when Pardee vacates it BU will backfill it with other departments instead of converting it to student housing.I showed this to my young alumni friends and they don't like it. I think personally this is a great project just because it gets rid of that horrible lot and adds more space for students, which is huge.
At some point, it is worth asking why these institutions which have few financial constraints don't simply choose to build beautiful buildings. Because the average person knows what a beautiful building looks like when they see it. But architects and developers do not know. There's some kind of disconnect going on.
When I told my friend that the building was going to be for global studies, she said "I'd still rather work in this building" and sent me a photo of -- the current school of global studies building. Which is inexplicably more attractive than this thing!
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I mean, this is a narrower segment of the Charles to begin with, and it doesn't look too dissimilar from this street view? Its certainly idealistic, but I can see that pavilion being close enough for their purposes.The rendering of the Charles really bugs me here. It looks far too narrow for where the perspective is taken from, and the Cambridge side of the river bank doesn't have grassy seating areas like that.
I mean, this is a narrower segment of the Charles to begin with, and it doesn't look too dissimilar from this street view? Its certainly idealistic, but I can see that pavilion being close enough for their purposes.