Portlander
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I don't believe there was any mention of timeline - they did say this wasn't ready for a public hearing due to a number of issues not related to design. I mentioned parking earlier, but another issue to be figured out is that the lot has now been subdivided and there seems to be some confusion around how inclusionary zoning works in a situation like this (after MDP has been approved). Looking at the workflow in CSS I'm not sure what's next - maybe another workshop once city staff has worked through these issues with the applicants?The design is interesting and unlike anything north of Boston which may be a nice change. Any word on when they plan to demolish the old printing building?
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Thanks nomc. An improvement but it still looks like it belongs in Albuquerque or Tuscon in my opinion.
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The second building is planned for 14 floors and will be residential. The potential final phase is pictured to the right and will be on the Cumberland Avenue side.
If this is considered the "buff" version for the hotel also, then I do like this. The smooth appearance of the buff/beige isn't attractive to me nor do I think it'll age well. Portland has enough of this "Tan" color in Monument Sq, Franklin Tower, Portland House, Promenade East Condos, One & Two Portland Square, etc etc. The Black will be timeless..View attachment 30688
The second building is planned for 14 floors and will be residential. The potential final phase is pictured to the right and will be on the Cumberland Avenue side.
Agree. Jim Brady has created two hotels in Portland, the Press and Canopy by Hilton. I think these two hotels are the top two in Portland. And when this new 11 story one is built, it will then become the top three for him in Portland. Not sure what the brand imprint will be, but it almost doesn't matter as his personal standards are high. Go to the Salt Cafe & Bar at the Canopy. There is a story about it in today's PPH. Like I like to say, "Not Maine in Maine."I was neutral on the black and I'm neutral on the buff brick. I do, however, think this is a quality design and am confident that it will look WAY better when it gets made.
They haven't actually present anything on the condos yet - you can see the buff brick in the renderings further back in the thread. I'm also remembering now that the buff brick may have some texture to the surface - some sort of a vertical striations? I can't remember, I should have take a screen shot of that slide too. The current renderings/documents were not included in the packet and aren't on CSS.If this is considered the "buff" version for the hotel also, then I do like this. The smooth appearance of the buff/beige isn't attractive to me nor do I think it'll age well. Portland has enough of this "Tan" color in Monument Sq, Franklin Tower, Portland House, Promenade East Condos, One & Two Portland Square, etc etc. The Black will be timeless.
Different is great as long as it is rooted in solid design principles and is appropriate to it's environment. Unfortunately too many architects either have a total lack of imagination or they don't know when enough is enough. A single errant design element can ruin what could otherwise be a beautiful structure.Honestly I like that it's different. Portland could use "different". I think the black is better than the buff. I do agree that it looks more south-western (but could also seem sort of like Aspen, CO or something in Vancouver). Nevertheless, I like it.
I agree with this. But Portland has lacked "vision" for the last 30 years or so, I'd think.Different is great as long as it is rooted in solid design principles and is appropriate to it's environment. Unfortunately too many architects either have a total lack of imagination or they don't know when enough is enough. A single errant design element can ruin what could otherwise be a beautiful structure.