Photo of the Day, Boston Style: Part XVIII (2024)

So long ago there's 2 dead car brands in the same shot!
Now that you mention it, "car brand deaths" (CBDs) is actually a pretty good unit of time to benchmark project timelines around here.

Let's see -
Plymouth: RIP 2001
Oldsmobile: RIP 2004
Pontiac: RIP 2010
Saturn: RIP 2010
Mercury: RIP 2011
Saab: RIP 2016
Scion: RIP 2016
So, since the turn of the century in the U.S. market, a major brand dies, on average, every 2.1 years.

Going by aB thread activity duration (which we all know reflects the official start/end of projects):
The Speediest Imaginable Project = 1 CBD
Lab building at 30 Hampshire ~2 years = 1 CBD
Ragon Institute Cambridge ~3.5 years = 1.7 CBDs
1001 Boylston (Car Gurus/Citizen M) ~6 years = 2.9 CBDs
The Alcott ~11 years = 5.2 CBDs
115 Winthrop Square Tower ~14 years = 6.7 CBDs
South Station Tower = disqualified since it's so old its start clearly occurred decades before aB existed
 
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Some things never change, like the last candy factory in Cambridge:
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2004
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2024
 

Ive always loved the way this school looked. This is how brutalism could have actually worked imo. Raw concrete but with more classical design elements like proportionality, symmetry, order, beauty…etc.

Some more good examples include:

centre plaza
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Link

The john regenstein library in chicago
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Link

National theatre okinawa japan
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Link

Arthur erickson building vancouver
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Link

Anyang cultural museum, anyang, henan china
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Link

Dc metro
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Link
 
Some of those are excellent examples of well executed brutalist design. Center Plaza, however...
Center Plaza looks good in that particular photo because it's surrounded by buildings. Half the problem with the GC buildings in general is that they sit stark and isolated amidst empty plazas. If they were on normal built-up city blocks, they would fare a lot better.
 
Yea I agree center plaza is only bad in the context its in directly across from the dead, lifeless, and utterly soul sucking city hall plaza. If it were lifted from boston and dropped on a random curve in a european city center street-wall it would fit in perfectly fine.
 
Ive always loved the way this school looked. This is how brutalism could have actually worked imo. Raw concrete but with more classical design elements like proportionality, symmetry, order, beauty…etc.

100%. On top of everything you said, I love how it plays with the sunlight and makes for patterns on top of patterns. It catches my eye every time I go by.

Plus, who among us isn't instantly seduced by this shot? You can almost reach out and touch the utopianism promised by the modernists!

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And here's one more shot, taken yesterday morning

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