but it's getting to the point where you can almost hear the sound of them jerking off to it through those post.
With 1000 boylston and the Huntington theatre project on one end and sst, Winthrop square, bullfinch crossing, hub on causeway and the other garden garage project on the other end our high spine is going to look a lot different in 5 years. But every time I see these pictures and imagine it all it just makes me more annoyed that Copley tower was cancelled. Really could have filled in a gap.
A renaissance now means filling the sky with phallic monuments filled with offices and luxury condos; nothing to do with arts, or quality of architecture, urbanism, or ability of working people to actually live in this city, no it's just more tall things.
A renaissance now means filling the sky with phallic monuments filled with offices and luxury condos; nothing to do with arts, or quality of architecture, urbanism, or ability of working people to actually live in this city, no it's just more tall things.
Actually the vast majority of things being built are not tall at all, and are continuously stitching the city together from an urban standpoint. Neighborhoods that used to be an oasis amidst nothing are now expanding and connecting to adjacent neighborhoods.
In the main downtown areas themselves it makes sense to go taller, much taller, to satisfy demand and account for the serious lack of open space available. But it's beyond disingenuous to write off the absolutely insane amount of square footage, mostly in low-rises and mid-rises, that has been built over the last decade in metro Boston.
Also, you lament the lack of architecture on a thread for what will likely be one of the best looking skyscrapers built in the entire country since the year 2000.
Lets block development because we're too jealous of the people who can afford to rent or buy on the top floors. That's a good idea!
And anywhere the majority of new buildings have been shorter in places like the Seaport and other outlying neighborhoods. We still haven't had a building tall enough to eclipse the Hancock tower.
A renaissance now means filling the sky with phallic monuments filled with offices and luxury condos; nothing to do with arts, or quality of architecture, urbanism, or ability of working people to actually live in this city, no it's just more tall things.
The two are not causally linked, but they definitely correlate. Michael Dell spent $40 million on a One Dalton penthouse. Would he have if One Dalton topped out at 20 floors instead of 61? Now what I ask is: what is he going to do for our city? I'd like to see some sort of public citizenship and contribution...and maybe there will be (I'm not holding my breath - but, the city can do things in terms of policy and programs to link prosperity toward city improvement). Like it or not, prosperity tends to correlate with tall buildings (unless you are in Geneva or on the French Riviera, etc)...so, to my point, the constructive argument is: how can we channel that prosperity?Ok and? I am responding to the idea that more tall buildings intrinsically means a better city.
I think we have to be honest about the fact that that prosperity is being channeled back into the same pockets, or the pockets of people in materially similar situations. Maybe we want something else but what is really happening in reality is that. Money earned is used to give tax breaks to union breaking companies whose employees wear diapers because they don't get bathroom breaks. Development for the rich is being used to fund more development for the rich, while the poor and working class are being displaced. This is the current reality in our city and I really don't see how this shows any signs of changing.
While maybe some elite cultural institutions like the symphony may benefit from more donors, arts are a lot more than that.