Wow. When you scroll up and down on this photo and look at the dirty highway railing, make sure you take your Dramamine.
When I was in last week the new half was still boarded off but you could see around the boarding and it looked ready to go, I'm assuming just final permits/punchlist. Same down on the track level, current fare gate installation mess aside, the entrances down there look ready, signs were up and all taped over.Is the bus terminal expansion open?
A lot of that is the harsh climate, but a lot of it also is the tried and true Massachusetts tradition of having bridges and overpasses look dilapidated.Wow. When you scroll up and down on this photo and look at the dirty highway railing, make sure you take your Dramamine.
Funny. But I just meant that if you wiggle your mouse/finger to quickly scroll the image up and down while looking at the concrete barrier, it creates an optical illusion.A lot of that is the harsh climate, but a lot of it also is the tried and true Massachusetts tradition of having bridges and overpasses look dilapidated.
It's what people want who feel that flashier is better.I think the lit top is a little cheesy and cheap looking
That take feels a bit dismissive. Labeling the South Station crown as something “for people who think flashier is better” ignores the broader purpose of architecture in a modern skyline. Taste is subjective; what one person calls “flashy,” another might see as vibrant or forward-looking. Cities thrive on contrast and conversation, not uniform restraint (god and everyone else knows there is enough restraint in the Boston skyline).It's what people want who feel that flashier is better.
Is it purple or Breast Cancer Month pink? It does look purple in that last pic. Either way, it's a great addition to the skyline.Theyve been really rocking that purple lately, looks good!
That take feels a bit dismissive. Labeling the South Station crown as something “for people who think flashier is better” ignores the broader purpose of architecture in a modern skyline. Taste is subjective; what one person calls “flashy,” another might see as vibrant or forward-looking. Cities thrive on contrast and conversation, not uniform restraint (god and everyone else knows there is enough restraint in the Boston skyline).
Yes, I admit it was a generalization. It may not apply to you and many others here who have taste. But there are many people amongst the general public who are less interested in architecture and simply think that newer, glassier, more-lit-up is better without nuanced thought about it. That's what I meant; maybe I could have said it better.That take feels a bit dismissive. Labeling the South Station crown as something “for people who think flashier is better” ignores the broader purpose of architecture in a modern skyline. Taste is subjective; what one person calls “flashy,” another might see as vibrant or forward-looking. Cities thrive on contrast and conversation, not uniform restraint (god and everyone else knows there is enough restraint in the Boston skyline).
Comparing to this 1996 photo (Kenneth C. Zirkel on Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0), the tower does darken the interior, but it's not just that:My first walk thru/under. I do like it. One thing tho…it really darkens the interior. Also - what’s up with the glass panels in the last pic, are they replacing some?
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