bigeman312
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What program/software do you use?
What program/software do you use?
Dave lays out the roads and sidewalks in CAD and then imports them into SketchUp (to do the color filling) which links into Google Earth for the overlays.
Among the bids: Peebles proposed a curvy, $330 million complex that would include 181 residences, a 156-room hotel, and 20,000 square feet of retail space. The complex, designed by Handel Architects of New York, would rise to 11 stories and contain 138 parking spaces as well as 6,800 square feet of community space. It would be called Viola Back Bay, a homage to the adjacent Berklee College of Music.
Trinity Financial of Boston proposed a multitiered building that would rise to 21 stories along Boylston Street. The $223 million development would include 350 apartments, retail space, and about 100 parking spaces.
Boston Development Group also submitted a proposal for the property, according to state officials, but executives with the company could not be reached for comment on their plans Friday.
But don’t expect construction to start right away.
Three companies on Friday submitted proposals to build large complexes on the 50,000-square-foot lot, across from the Hynes Convention Center: http://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2014/11/07/developers-pitch-plans-for-back-bay-property/1I2FbTLXybJuScuwXTaSkN/story.html
"Among the bids: Peebles proposed a curvy, $330 million complex that would include 181 residences, a 156-room hotel, and 20,000 square feet of retail space. The complex, designed by Handel Architects of New York, would rise to 11 stories and contain 138 parking spaces as well as 6,800 square feet of community space. It would be called Viola Back Bay, a homage to the adjacent Berklee College of Music."
Trinity Financial of Boston proposed a multitiered building that would rise to 21 stories along Boylston Street. The $223 million development would include 350 apartments, retail space, and about 100 parking spaces.
Boston Development Group also submitted a proposal for the property, according to state officials, but executives with the company could not be reached for comment on their plans Friday.
The Peebles render makes it look like they moved Baker House to Boston, but could only afford to move 5/6ths of it.
The winning bidder will also be required to overhaul the MBTA’s Hynes Convention Center stop on the Green Line. Transportation officials want to relocate the entrances to the station, modernize its layout and architecture, and add elevators and new turnstiles, among other improvements.
http://www.bostonglobe.com/business...ay-property/1I2FbTLXybJuScuwXTaSkN/story.html
Did anyone catch that bit about relocating the Hynes station entrance? I know there was talk about moving the bus stop out front, which would be wonderful, but I hadn't heard anything about a total relocation.
I think its another account of the globe's continuing downward slide in clarity and fact checking. A requirement is to rebuild and reopen the Boylston St headhouse, as well as reopen the passage under Mass Ave to the bus shelter. You really can't move the entrance anywhere else.
It would be called Viola Back Bay, a homage to the adjacent Berklee College of Music."
The mezzanine level of the station stays put, as you're right, you can't really move that. But the entrance into 360 Newbury on Mass Ave is replaced by a new entrance on the side of the building that faces the Pike. In the rendering of one proposal in the Globe that BussesAintTrains posted, you can see a short triangular building with a green canopy wedged into the space between 360 Newbury and the new building. That looks a lot like a T entrance. Nicely set back a bit to give the scrum out on the sidewalk more room, less danger of someone getting knocked in front of a bus (I've seen close calls there). Ticketing and turnstiles would be at street level. New elevators, too.
I wonder if that pocket on the Boylston side of the building is another entrance to the same ground level lobby. That might make things more cost efficient while fulfilling the Boylston St. headhouse requirement (did it actually say they had to use the same headhouse?) It would make a nice pedestrian cut through if the fare gates don't wall off the middle portion of the lobby.
IEven without seeing the Peebles design, I think the new Mass Ave entrance will be too far from the Boylston entrance to connect through internally. Unless the developer was willing to give up a lot more ground space to a cut-through.