55 Summer 6/16.
I believe this is a ventilation structure for the Tunnel (located just west of One Financial Center). Not sure what they’re doing exactly - replacing or refacing it?
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Facelift, MassDOT project 606801. The Essex Street one is apparently more decrepit than the others so it's getting more extensive modifications, but overall they're all getting more detailed brickwork, quoins and art frames.Yeah I noticed they stripped it down to the steel awhile ago but it's not clear what the goal is. I can't imagine it's coming down altogether given its role in tunnel ventilation, but maybe it's getting a facelift? It used to be a plan old ugly brick monolith.
Facelift, MassDOT project 606801. The Essex Street one is apparently more decrepit than the others so it's getting more extensive modifications, but overall they're all getting more detailed brickwork, quoins and art frames.
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Above, what the architects promised.It would be cool if they hired some brick masons to really dress these things up so instead of being something to hide they could add to the neighborhood on their own. Kind of like how the water towers in chicago arent monuments theyre just water infrastructure but because they put in the effort to make them nice they add to the neighborhood and became iconic. Something like this but without the arch would be cool. It would be cool if we still put in the effort for stuff like that.
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Charles St. South is part of Bay Village.Aha! I had been trying to figure out what that was since going by it a few weeks ago. Thanks for the update and confirmation. Any idea if this is to support new/upcoming projects in the area, or just grid resilience/redundancy?
As for location, it's on the east side of Charles St, which puts it in the Theater District in my book, so Downtown makes sense.
Definitely true but I have faith that the “architectural uprising” happening in Scandinavia will make its way over here eventually. I think were already primed for it with the “new urbanist” trend, architects like robert stern reminding ppl what can be done with modern materials and location appropriate designs, plus yimby/density/zoning movements finally taking off country wide. I feel like ppl are getting sick of modernism, I mean its been around for like 50 years now, ppl want something else. I feel like it wont be long until these things all converge and we move into a new architectural age that focuses more on aesthetics, human scale…etc.We have long since transitioned from the City Beautiful Movement to the City Economically Efficient Movement*.
*Strictly in terms of aesthetics, not actual budgets
Charles St. South is part of Bay Village.
Yes, which includes buildings with street addresses on both sides. The apartments to the left are considered in Bay Village by the city. I'm assuming the substation is too unless the address/front is actually on Warrenton St. (it runs all the way through to the other side).The city shows Charles St South as the eastern boundary of Bay Village, with Downtown on the other side of the street. Surprisingly, the block north of Stuart and west of Charles St South up to the Public Garden is also considered Downtown, which doesn't feel right.
BPDA Neighborhood Boundaries
BPDA's Boston Neighborhood Boundariesbostonopendata-boston.opendata.arcgis.com
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HH Size | 30% AMI | 40% AMI | 50% AMI | 60% AMI | 65% AMI | 70% AMI | 75% AMI | 80% AMI | 90% AMI | 100% AMI | 110% AMI |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | $34,290 | $45,720 | $57,150 | $68,580 | $74,300 | $80,010 | $85,730 | $91,440 | $102,870 | $114,300 | $125,730 |
2 | $39,180 | $52,240 | $65,300 | $78,360 | $84,890 | $91,420 | $97,950 | $104,480 | $117,540 | $130,600 | $143,660 |
3 | $44,070 | $58,760 | $73,450 | $88,140 | $95,490 | $102,830 | $110,180 | $117,520 | $132,210 | $146,900 | $161,590 |
4 | $48,960 | $65,280 | $81,600 | $97,920 | $106,080 | $114,240 | $122,400 | $130,560 | $146,880 | $163,200 | $179,520 |
5 | $52,890 | $70,520 | $88,150 | $105,780 | $114,600 | $123,410 | $132,230 | $141,040 | $158,670 | $176,300 | $193,930 |
6 | $56,820 | $75,760 | $94,700 | $113,640 | $123,110 | $132,580 | $142,050 | $151,520 | $170,460 | $189,400 | $208,340 |
Corporations aren't selling old buildings as loss.
This is objectively not true. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/12/business/distressed-office-buildings-buyers.html