castevens said:I thought it was just how they got people like Matsuzaka in without having to wait in traffic
You're exactly right!
VIP Lane.
Instead of minimum occupant requirement, it has a minimum salary requirement. :shock:
castevens said:I thought it was just how they got people like Matsuzaka in without having to wait in traffic
DudeUrSistersHot said:Ron Newman said:Is there a special lane? I though it was just a special on-ramp.
According to the Globe, it's a dedicated lane.
DudeUrSistersHot said:According to the Globe, it's a dedicated lane.
Machado said:?Whether we do this or not, it should not be the decision of one man,? Beha says. ?All the citizens of the city need to be involved.?
vanshnookenraggen said:Machado said:?Whether we do this or not, it should not be the decision of one man,? Beha says. ?All the citizens of the city need to be involved.?
the Boston Globe said:Before tearing it down, Mr. Mayor, how 'bout fixing some things up?
By Michael Jonas | December 17, 2006
It may lack the charge of history that was packed into a famous political pronouncement outside Berlin's Brandenburg Gate, but the call from a soapbox in the middle of City Hall Plaza to "Tear down this hall!" has been longed for by many.
The prospects for Boston finally doing away with its much-reviled seat of city government seemed to improve dramatically last week when the person doing the imploring was the same one with the power to do the imploding.
In announcing that he wants to sell off City Hall and its windswept plaza to developers and use the proceeds to build a dramatic new structure along the South Boston waterfront, Mayor Tom Menino made it clear he sees metaphorical messaging in the grand plan. The mayor proclaimed his intention to build an "architecturally magnificent" City Hall that captures "the promise of tomorrow's Boston."
But unlike Ronald Reagan's 1987 speech, which targeted the wall dividing Berlin as part of a bold challenge to a calcified communist system, it's hard to see any larger challenge to the old order in Menino's edifice dream. Indeed, the risk could be that the plan becomes a bread-and-circuses distraction from issues demanding true bold action and vision, from policing to schooling.
If there's a bricks-and-mortar metaphor for how Boston is doing on those fronts, it may be the deplorable state of the current center of city government, where makeshift "temporary" fencing put up following the Sept. 11 attacks along the Cambridge Street edge of City Hall Plaza remains in place five years later. There may be a good case to be made for a new waterfront City Hall. There is certainly one to be made for dealing far better with the one we now have -- and will have for some years to come, regardless of what happens with Menino's proposal.
But cautionary tales abound on the limits of new structures to remedy problems of human leadership and will.
In 1997, the city's Police Department moved, to great fanfare, into a shiny new $70 million headquarters, equipped with the latest in law enforcement communications and technology.
Nine years later, the city is reeling from gang gunfire that has sent the murder and shooting rate soaring. None of the policing bells and whistles can address the departmental infighting and inertia that have helped give Boston among the lowest homicide clearance rates of any big city department in the country.
Bold would be Menino declaring that he will not stand for this state of affairs, which has practically given gangbangers a license to shoot without worry.
It would send a true message of hope to neighborhoods besieged by gun violence if he announced that he's told his new police commissioner, Ed Davis, that he expects a major turnaround in clearance rates -- and that he will back Davis in whatever it takes to make that happen, including shakeups in the command staff.
In education, too, gleaming new buildings are popular, but don't appear to be the essential ingredient for success.
The three newest Boston school buildings all rank near the bottom in MCAS scores. The $30 million Orchard Gardens School, opened in 2003, placed next to last out of 575 schools statewide on the most recent English MCAS exam.
Pushing for more leeway to reassign teachers in underperforming schools during current contract talks, or raising the issue of longer school days, might be more fruitful paths to school improvement.
It's a lot easier to build new buildings than to rebuild the institutions within them, a task that often means stepping on toes and taking on entrenched interests committed to the status quo. But it is the latter type of building, not the former, that holds the "promise of tomorrow's Boston."
Michael Jonas can be reached at jonas@globe.com.
? Copyright 2006 Globe Newspaper Company.
Ron Newman said:Yeah, but this is a public building. It's the most public of all public buildings. You can't build that without democratic input.
justin said:Ron Newman said:Yeah, but this is a public building. It's the most public of all public buildings. You can't build that without democratic input.
You can and you should. Medical practice affects the lives of ordinary people far more directly and importantly than city government. Does that call for a system where one becomes a doctor by standing for an election? Should cancer treatments be determined by referendum? Of course not: Joe Sixpack can't make useful medical judgements. Leave it to the experts, regulated at arm's length by the government.
Should biological theories be judged by popular will? Well, it's been tried recently... In fact, the whole CIty Hall debate reminds me of the Kansas school board debacle, transposed into architcture.
Is architecture any different? Here is why it may appear so: when asked about angiogenesis inhibitors as a potential cancer treatment, the average Joe draws a blank, but he has no trouble reacting to a building. The problem is that he then proceeds to take his gut reaction as the ultimate authoritative opinion, in no need of articulation or justification. You need not go any farther than this thread to see examples of that. Read Sister's posts next to ablarc's, and then ask yourself: if you were unusure about what you thought about City Hall, whose opinion would be more likely to sway you?
So here I propose a fairly low bar for who should have a say: those who have seen a large enough sample of architecture to inform their opinions, and who can articulate those opinions beyond grunting 'cool' or 'sucks'. Notice that my criteria in no way prefer any particular taste: ablarc passes them par excellence, even though I disagree with him 40% of the time.
Ron is an interesting case: articulate all right, he seems far too ready to dismiss aesthetics over utility (City Hall, Charles/MGH and the South Station waiting room discussions stuck in my memory as examples of this). Utility is a perfectly intelligible criterion, moreover one to which architecture should pay a fair bit of heed. But there are many fewer museums dedicated to flush toilets than to painting, even though the former are infinitely more useful. And is it not willful to construe usefulness so narrowly as to exclude aesthetics? Does a public building not play a useful role by exposing the citizenry to architecture that rises above the ordinary or is even challenging? Does this not outweigh the mild annoyance that 10% of the people paying their parking tickets experience when they take a wrong turn in one of City Hall's labyrinthine corridors? (City Hall has its flaws; I'm as aware of that as J.S. But fix it, don't nix it.)
In fact, I submit that calling for a vote on what constitutes good architecture is a misunderstanding not only of art, but of democracy. One doesn't give everybody the vote because everybody can meaningfully contribute to a debate on interest rates or the Near East. Rather, the people (and far be it from me to use the Greek term) function much like water does in a nuclear reactor: an inert mass that keeps the energy source (the elite) from spinning out of control.
The leaders of the Slaveowners' Rebellion of 1776 got it right: aristocratic republic is the ideal form of government. How much more so in matters of taste...
justin
Actually Ponce, there was only one Superbowl celebration at City Hall Plaza. The other two Superbowl celebrations as well as the World Series celebration took place in the form of "rolling rallies," so don't perpetuate the myth that CHP is some sort of significant, monumental meeting place.?City Hall has personal memories for me - I got married there - and has a lot of public memories as well as a place of city celebrations when the Patriots and Red Sox won.?
Hmm. The Arnold Arboretum and City Hall Plaza...Now that I think about it, those are two places that should share many similarities. :roll:But Maryann Thompson, who designed the award-winning pavilion and vine trellises project at Arnold Arboretum, thinks the current plaza should be turned into a park with ?lots of big trees? and that the current building should be refitted to be brighter and more energy-efficient.
ablarc said:justin, I found your post so interesting that I posted it at Wired New York (hope it's OK), where there's an interesting discussion on this subject: http://www.wirednewyork.com/forum/showthread.php?p=136396&posted=1#post136396