Why bother with decent brick if you’re just going to scatter 200 cheap little vents over the facade, spoiling any kind of rhythm the building could have had?
Hi @Jahvon09 yes, I posted photos here: https://archboston.com/community/th...n-infill-and-small-developments.1969/page-105Did anyone hear about, or see that a crane has fallen into an apt building in Brighton? I was told that it was this one, but I don't think so. i think it was another building that's u/c, mot this one that's on the corner of Jorden Street & Corey Road.
Love the high quality brickwork. The white, gray, and red brickwork all look really solid, with rich colors. Nothing like the cheap flimsy "brick" veneer that went up on Kenmore Square North, the new Belmont High School, and some others.
I think the brick work is of such high quality and detail that it obviates the additional visual interest a cornice (along the roofline) would provide. I'm even thinking that in a building like this a cornice would make it too ornate, too po-mo. I prefer the clean modernist lines of the building's massing with the rich detailing of the brick work added in for visual interest.I guess we're just not doing cornices anymore?
Wish developers would just sacrifice the minimal square footage required to have them go to the roof. They do it in Europe.
Why is there asphalt where the tactile panel should be