Shreve, Crump & Low Redevelopment | 334-364 Boylston Street | Back Bay

I used to work in one of those buildings, but haven't been by there in over a year. Even though I knew this was happening, I'm still so disappointed to see it. They couldn't have kept the corner facades, and just replaced the other structures? Like, that or designed something beautiful and to scale? Frustrating.
 
Why are we posting pictures of Washington DC in an ArchBoston thread? :unsure: :censored:
OPM Headquaters in DC was the inspiration!

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Why are we posting pictures of Washington DC in an ArchBoston thread? :unsure: :censored:

This is the Washington DC counterpart: the Wilbur Wright building. Constructed in 1963-64, clad in white marble, and placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2024. See architectural particulars on the link below. This was originally Federal Office Building 10B, but subsequently renamed.. I believe it was listed in the National Register because it was the headquarters for NASA's Office of Manned Space Flight during the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo programs. NASA later moved out to its own (and non-descript) headquarters building.

https://historicsites.dcpreservation.org/items/show/1298?tour=85&index=9

Below, Google Streetview, northwest corner. There are other images in the above link, including an interior image of an office suite.

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Below, Google Streetview, south façade

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This is the Washington DC counterpart: the Wilbur Wright building. Constructed in 1963-64, clad in white marble, and placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2024. See architectural particulars on the link below.

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For the location and context that building is in, it is perfect. I actually like it quite a bit. It's kind of a combination of two looks: a bit of the old industrial look (the flat façade and multi-paned windows), and also a bit of the 1960s urban renewal/office park look.
It's far superior to the Shreve, Crump & Low Redevelopment; more classic looking, understated, and easier on the eyes.
 
For the location and context that building is in, it is perfect. I actually like it quite a bit. It's kind of a combination of two looks: a bit of the old industrial look (the flat façade and multi-paned windows), and also a bit of the 1960s urban renewal/office park look.
It's far superior to the Shreve, Crump & Low Redevelopment; more classic looking, understated, and easier on the eyes.
Designs for Federal buildings along the National Mall are guided by a Federal agency, the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts.

The chair of the Commission at the time that the designs for the paired buildings, FOB 10A and 10B (the Wilbur Wright building) were approved was David Finley. From Wiki's biography of Finley,
David Finley was appointed to the United States Commission of Fine Arts by President Roosevelt in 1943 and served as its chairman from 1950 to 1963. Under his leadership, the Commission took a leading advisory role in many projects in monumental Washington, such as saving of the Old Patent Office Building in 1956, preserving Lafayette Square in 1962 and heading off many ill-advised projects such as the original “tombstone” design of the FDR memorial in 1963. Finley's dual roles as chairman of the Fine Arts Commission and the National Trust for Historic Preservation gave him access to Presidents Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy. Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy and Finley formed a powerful team for the promotion of good taste in monumental Washington and the White House and they became close personal friends.
Very interesting biography. He was a lawyer, and had no training as an architect, or designer. I guess you could say he acquired his reputation for good taste. Full biography link below.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_E._Finley_Jr.

The Old Patent Office Building is now the Smithsonian Museum of American Art and the National Portrait Gallery. Boston does not have a counterpart of the Commission of Fine Arts. In a lesser sense, as its jurisdiction is much more limited, the Presidio Trust in San Francisco is somewhat comparable.
 
For the location and context that building is in, it is perfect. I actually like it quite a bit. It's kind of a combination of two looks: a bit of the old industrial look (the flat façade and multi-paned windows), and also a bit of the 1960s urban renewal/office park look.
It's far superior to the Shreve, Crump & Low Redevelopment; more classic looking, understated, and easier on the eyes.
I'm not sure I agree with this at all, but I am certain that a building with this design in the location of the Shreve redevelopment would be far worse than the building we got, regardless of the merits of the new building. It would have been far heavier looking and feel oppressive. As for me, I don't love the new building, but I don't hate it either. In time, as tenants move in and memories of what it replaced fade, it will be just fine.
 
This is the Washington DC counterpart: the Wilbur Wright building.

jQUumHS.png


Below, Google Streetview, south façade

Hz9b3ZK.png

This reminds me of the low-rise portion of the JFK building at Government Center. I agree with dirtywater above that this DC building would look even worse here than what we ended up with. Neither building sets the bar particularly high.
 
I saw the building in person on Friday afternoon. Maybe because it was a bright sunny day, but I think the building looks fine. It doesn't look cheap to me in person. It looks like it fits in well with the rest of the surrounding buildings. I would probably not have noticed it if I hadn't seen all the whining here. That's okay; it doesn't jump out at you. It doesn't have to.
 

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