Not liking the amount of squares over in the Northpoint area.... A couple angles or curves would be welcome.
...or buildings that, you know, share a common wall...
Not liking the amount of squares over in the Northpoint area.... A couple angles or curves would be welcome.
What a shame. We're talking about Cambridge Freaking Massachusetts. The city planners there could not have had a better urban vision than that?
Neighborhood opposition to plans for East Cambridge’s former courthouse is growing again, taking form in a new group called the Neighborhood Association of East Cambridge that met Sunday to rally public pressure before a March 4 meeting of the Planning Board.
The board hearing, which could lead to the granting of a special permit to Boston developer Leggat McCall to “reskin” the tower into 460,000 square feet of office space, some retail and 24 to 48 units of housing, has signaled a flurry of public activity in addition to Sunday’s meeting. Another is planned by city councillor Dennis Carlone for 2 p.m. Monday at City Hall, and the issue is on the agenda for a 7 p.m. Wednesday meeting of the East Cambridge Planning Team, an older neighborhood group the new association hopes will endorse its “insurrection,” in the words of organizer Seth Teller.
Problems with the Courthouse redevelopment (the massive East Cambridge cement block);
http://www.cambridgeday.com/2014/02...-tower-okd-to-replace-courthouse-monstrosity/
The oppositions website;
http://40thorndike.org/
Land of the fatties...waterfall glass or not, this area has all the style of an aging Midwest couple.
It's not as though the state is proposing a brand new construction. The tower already exists. I don't see a basis for their complaints. Other than to hear the sound of their own discontent.
shmessy: We're talking about Cambridge Freaking Massachusetts.
KZ and Shmess -- sometimes the owner and developer have some rights as well as the "Vaunted City Planners"
Pixel, as sympathetic as I am toward the plight, I see no solutions offered by the petitioners. I stared at this pig for 6 years from my office, and while it is true that it is nonconforming, the time for action was 40 years ago.
As a taxpayer, my belief is that not $1 of taxpayer funds should ever be doled out for this beast. And if the state can make some money off of it, so be it. There are far more pressing expenditures facing the state than to placate a relatively small group of interested parties, the vast majority of which moved there after this was built.
If the opposition group is not careful, they are going to end up with a vacant asbestos-filled brutalism albatross left to rot, which will take a long, long time and will only get uglier during its course.
I agree with you although staring at this thing while driving down McGrath overpass is one of my more treasured experiences in urban dystopia - I feel a kinship from one cement albatross to another. I imagine I'd feel differently if I had to look at this thing every day, not just in passing.
The only way I'd prefer demolition would be if the replacement was a mid rise building of micro-unit type studios; this location would be ideal for such. They'd probably be overpriced but we could use the housing stock. Instead we'd probably end up with shitty two story townhouses that "kept the scale and character of the neighborhood" (in nimbyspeak, cause in reality it'd be doing neither).
In other words, this project needs to get done. Hopefully the opposition groups won't get far but this is Cambridge so...