Lot I / 27 November - 2 December 2020
Workers are removing the bathtub support struts below grade (no vertical progress yet). There have been several late concrete pours.
Building on my previous image, the team built a kaka house, hiding 5 or 6 Johnnies from the upcoming winter weather. It is the plywood castle...
BeautifulThat is a very nicely put together set of documents. Very clear, very informative, very honest in regards to the architectural intentions. I wish all submissions had this much meat.
cca
Will this be the tallest of the cambridge crossing buildings? The one topping off closest to charlestown has some good size, too.
This is a really good illustration of how projects like this can enbiggen the urban landscape. Before, this view showed what appeared to be the end of the city, but as these buildings rise, it now looks like the city just keeps going. It's much the same as how things looked across the channel from Fan Pier before the Seaport buildout started to reach maturity. It's amazing how a fairly small missing piece in the chain of developments can create blight, which goes away once a building rises.
This is a really good illustration of how projects like this can enbiggen the urban landscape. Before, this view showed what appeared to be the end of the city, but as these buildings rise, it now looks like the city just keeps going. It's much the same as how things looked across the channel from Fan Pier before the Seaport buildout started to reach maturity. It's amazing how a fairly small missing piece in the chain of developments can create blight, which goes away once a building rises.
The noblest spirit embiggins the smallest manGreat point, and I like the creative “enbiggen” word. I know, I know, Grammar Police will jump and say the proper word is “expand” or “increase”, but I like the imaginative and creative wordcraft.
The noblest spirit embiggins the smallest man
This is a really good illustration of how projects like this can enbiggen the urban landscape. Before, this view showed what appeared to be the end of the city, but as these buildings rise, it now looks like the city just keeps going. It's much the same as how things looked across the channel from Fan Pier before the Seaport buildout started to reach maturity. It's amazing how a fairly small missing piece in the chain of developments can create blight, which goes away once a building rises.