Was expecting better build quality out of this... The brick work look quite cheap...Music building's coming together. Taken April 19:
View attachment 49912View attachment 49911View attachment 49910
The brick work is also quite boring. Look at the difference in the design interest level of the old brick work of 41 Linskey Way (above) versus the very plain interpretation of the MIT Music Building.Was expecting better build quality out of this... The brick work look quite cheap...
Agreed, but I've hated this from the beginning, so in my case it's grim confirmation.Was expecting better build quality out of this... The brick work look quite cheap...
Park seems lovely but… what the heck is that road on the left? Road city over thereNeat feature in ArchPaper on Cambridge's new park at 1st/Binney/Land:
In Cambridge, Massachusetts, a dense, climate-forward forest by Stoss Landscape Urbanism signals a changing approach to urban canopies
In Cambridge, Massachusetts, Triangle Park, a dense, climate-forward forest by Stoss Landscape Urbanism signals a changing approach to urban canopies.www.archpaper.com
^Photos within above (credit: Sahar Coston-Hardy)
Land Blvd. that becomes Memorial Drive.Park seems lovely but… what the heck is that road on the left? Road city over there
What a lovely dog park bench.Looks great, this pic really shows that as small as it is it does a good job of isolating ppl from the surrounding traffic.
View attachment 52031
...the Fab Foundation, a Boston-based educational nonprofit, has served as a steward of the international Fab Lab Network...these digital fabrication laboratories are sites for STEM outreach, hands-on technical training, business incubation, and advancing sustainability commitments.
I believe this is going in the currently-vacant second level of the 325 Main St. Google building.The facility will include a full-featured Fab Lab with tools for rapid-prototyping and short-run production of functional systems; a storefront selling products designed by the global network and produced locally; an event space for classes, talks, workshops, demonstrations, and collaborations; and the Fab Foundation's headquarters...
I went to check out the music building so I had to take some pics of this classic. Unfortunately couldn't enter the main Chapel.I really do agree with the above statement in itself...
But with regard to Saarinen's MIT chapel, for instance, the whole point is that it only looks like a monolithic brick cylinder from a distance and if you're not paying attention. Afford it even a quick glance closer by and it becomes clear that a ton of thought went into that small building. (And even more so from the interior).
Check out this feature in ArchDaily:
AD Classics: MIT Chapel / Eero Saarinen
Completed in 1955 in Cambridge, United States. Eero Saarinen is one of the most respected architects of the 20th Century, often regarded as a master of his craft. Known for his dynamic and fluid...www.archdaily.com
And from MIT on the moat:
So, the question for this new music building is: will it really just be brick boxes, or will it bring the sort of intrigue that the chapel does (or more)?
I really don't think we can know so far with the info that's been posted. My point is: simple geometric forms do not necessitate crude, boring buildings.