Dr. Rosen Rosen
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- Jul 19, 2021
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I stumbled across what seems to be a recent floor plan map of the tower that's posted to the building's marketing site:
South Station Tower - Floor Plans and Test Fits
It appears that the core will get significantly narrower after level 23 and again after level 35. There are some neat floor layout views within the above.
JHT has two "fat sides," as does One Congress (as you note). Both of those towers are absolute triumphs. Who gives a shit if SST looks fat from two specific vantage points?
While I generally agree with that point, I would note that JHT is a parallelogram and not a rectangle specifically so it doesn't look like a fat rectangle - it's a triumph in part because it was designed to avoid this very problem.
MT has a "fat" side, so does Winthrop (even moreso), but nobody really bitches about either instance, so why is SST getting this weird degree of scrutiny? It's gonna have some very slender vantage points and there are MANY other genuinely fat/squat blobs in Boston, so wtf? Yes, it will have two sides that are wider than the other two. So?
fair enough, but most of the critiques i've seen re: Winthrop seem to be of the "it's dull" variety or the "they promised to include ____________ and didn't deliver" or "it's too short" varieties, not "it's fat."I have to disagree that no one hates on Winthrop Square... Doing so accounts for about 25% of the posts on aB over the past six months...
fair enough, but most of the critiques i've seen re: Winthrop seem to be of the "it's dull" variety or the "they promised to include ____________ and didn't deliver" or "it's too short" varieties, not "it's fat."
Boston has so many fat, stumpy rectangles it's depressing. If we could have one - just one - skinny but tall tower, it would work wonders for the Boston skyline. Imagine one of the Pencil towers going up in NYC or elsewhere in the world. We'd obviously never get that height here, but imagine a pencil tower at like 800' downtown? It would look amazing, and a desperately needed change from all the 500'-650'ish flat-roofed bores that fill in downtown.
While I prefer the slender profile angles of both JHT and One Congress, in the latter's case I actually really like the "fat" side, too.
"Skinny" doesn't always equal "attractive" and all I'd hope for with SST -- or anything built in Boston -- is that it achieves the latter quality.
MT has a "fat" side, so does Winthrop (even moreso), but nobody really bitches about either instance, so why is SST getting this weird degree of scrutiny? It's gonna have some very slender vantage points and there are MANY other genuinely fat/squat blobs in Boston, so wtf? Yes, it will have two sides that are wider than the other two. So?
Boston has so many fat, stumpy rectangles it's depressing. If we could have one - just one - skinny but tall tower, it would work wonders for the Boston skyline. Imagine one of the Pencil towers going up in NYC or elsewhere in the world. We'd obviously never get that height here, but imagine a pencil tower at like 800' downtown? It would look amazing, and a desperately needed change from all the 500'-650'ish flat-roofed bores that fill in downtown.
Boston has so many fat, stumpy rectangles it's depressing. If we could have one - just one - skinny but tall tower, it would work wonders for the Boston skyline. Imagine one of the Pencil towers going up in NYC or elsewhere in the world. We'd obviously never get that height here, but imagine a pencil tower at like 800' downtown? It would look amazing, and a desperately needed change from all the 500'-650'ish flat-roofed bores that fill in downtown.
Well youre in luck because we just so happened to get exactly one skinny tall tower at one dalton. Surprise!
Boston has so many fat, stumpy rectangles it's depressing. If we could have one - just one - skinny but tall tower, it would work wonders for the Boston skyline. Imagine one of the Pencil towers going up in NYC or elsewhere in the world. We'd obviously never get that height here, but imagine a pencil tower at like 800' downtown? It would look amazing, and a desperately needed change from all the 500'-650'ish flat-roofed bores that fill in downtown.
If I could like this 1000x, I'd do it, but there is a middle ground between fat and pencil.The last thing Boston needs is one of the pencil towers from NYC. They are just places for rich people to park their money and do absolutly nothing for the city.
Personally, I hate the way they look, so aside from the socio-economic/late stage capitalism/petro dollar laundering critiques, they just don't remotely do anything visually positive for the city.The last thing Boston needs is one of the pencil towers from NYC. They are just places for rich people to park their money and do absolutly nothing for the city.