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^ Forgive my ignorance of geological jargon, but does that explain why you can build tall in the Back Bay fill and not in Cambridge fill?
There are a lot of buildings in the Back Bay that rest on pilings, including Trinity Church. Trinity rests on 4000 wood pilings that must be kept wet. When constructing the Hancock, they unintentionally de-watered the Trinity pilings, and the pilings now exposed to air began deteriorating.^ Forgive my ignorance of geological jargon, but does that explain why you can build tall in the Back Bay fill and not in Cambridge fill?
No. Unless new buildings are built on wooden pilings.So much like all new buildings in the Back Bay, East Cambridge would need to include groundwater recharge systems?
No. Unless new buildings are built on wooden pilings.
Another complication when one excavates a site below sea level is hydrostatic pressure. I know of a modern building with a multi-level underground parking garage, where if the adjacent river gets into serious flood stage, the building owners flood the lowest level of the garage with domestic water to offset the hydrostatic pressure. The garage was designed to be flooded, so mechanicals and electricals are kept away from that floor to the extent possible, and utility closets sealed etc.
Boston already has reasonably low labor costs (despite people who shout about unions),.....
Or, we could just build a lot of super dense public housing like in Singapore.
You're right. So I guess what I should have said is that labor costs do not make a huge difference in total cost of construction. In an interview with Radio Boston, Edward Glaeser stated that, "no more than a fifth can be attributed to differences in labor costs."