Of course we all suffer! Any decrease in housing, and commercial stock has systemic impacts across the metro area, and affordable housing dies a death of a thousand cuts by a swarm of NIMBYism for each individual building. It's why if you want affordable housing you need as of right development without onerous parking, setback, FAR requirements, etc. Just because it's said in an overdramatic way by someone you don't like doesn't make it false.
I'd be very interested in a model of housing supply that didn't have as a fundamental consequence of its basic logic the idea that marginal increases in housing stock produce marginal decreases in cost. Its quite odd to me that the "housing costs are infinitely complex!" line of argument never seems to acknowledge both that a multitude of factors exist, and that any given factor *is actually a factor*. If the cost of housing model depends on (a,b,c...z), to claim new housing wont reduce prices on the margin requires that housing supply NOT BE ON THE GIANT LIST (or that dP/dS is positive, in which case *shrug*), which seems very unlikely to me!
The big issue is that it demolishes this "Old France" building. (the brick part to the right is staying) I think a facadectomy would be appropriate here. I otherwise love the tower and the added activation it promises, but they need to retain the historical street-wall.
Capture by David Z, on Flickr
Agreed, but the entire facade as is need not be kept. I would recommend taking out everything between the arches and replacing it with glass to open up the ground floor, much like the BPL. The lower roof part next to it is expendable. Glass that all in with a nice open lobby.
The big issue is that it demolishes this "Old France" building. (the brick part to the right is staying) I think a facadectomy would be appropriate here. I otherwise love the tower and the added activation it promises, but they need to retain the historical street-wall.