It's all about the twin towers!!
Your twin tower shtick is nauseating. It's more of a tumor than a second tower.
It's all about the twin towers!!
Yup, and really who cares? Not our architecture fetish crowd out here of course, who do serve a vital purpose, but for the public at large. Did anybody really plan on hanging out in the "Great Hall"? I know I didn't and I work next door. The project replaced a condemned garage downtown and coughed up hundreds of millions of dollars in funds for parks and other priorities. Frankly, that's enough in my book.
Oh and tosh, its a little early in the day to be drinking.
They promised the city something and they have twice VE'd it back. It's time to send a message and establish precendence with these developers who VE everything and laugh their asses off.
The city needs to remember its position in this. Raise the bar. Boston is not Dubuque.
I find it funny how every post of yours compares something in Boston to something in NYC, as if you couldn't fathom an understanding of either city without the other.
They promised the city something and they have twice VE'd it back. It's time to send a message and establish precendence with these developers who VE everything and laugh their asses off.
So they are now saying "We will do 91% of what we promised in our winning bid". Sorry, Rover, that can't cut it...
Or he can just go the f away, that's fine too.
The problem with the Great Hall is that it "sells" us something we've seen too much of, and that most of us can't afford. It offers an image with no content behind it. It's a shiny response to an empty (and potentially unsatisfiable) requirement.
Reflecting back on my original question, "considering contemporary priorities and values, what is 'civic space'? What is a 'grand public gesture'? The people who need this are the least likely to ever set foot in the building - kids who need help doing homework, adults who need better job skills or financial literacy. The Great Connector "connects" a city street with a pocket park. I think we need multiple modes of connection between people and solutions.
And suddenly we're having a sociology discussion...My apologies...
I think this is the bigger problem considering the context and the adjacent neighbourhood that still lacks a welcoming civic space. Chinatown just had a BPS branch reopen, but that's not nearly enough. JVS runs a career center next door at 75 Franklin, but that's not nearly enough. I still think this could be successful if MP tapped an org like Venture Cafe to run it if they used this space to align their interests with social good.
"...Originally Posted by Beton Brut View Post
The problem with the Great Hall is that it "sells" us something we've seen too much of, and that most of us can't afford. It offers an image with no content behind it. It's a shiny response to an empty (and potentially unsatisfiable) requirement.
Reflecting back on my original question, "considering contemporary priorities and values, what is 'civic space'? What is a 'grand public gesture'? The people who need this are the least likely to ever set foot in the building - kids who need help doing homework, adults who need better job skills or financial literacy. The Great Connector "connects" a city street with a pocket park. I think we need multiple modes of connection between people and solutions...."
I find it funny how every post of yours compares something in Boston to something in NYC, as if you couldn't fathom an understanding of either city without the other.
...interpretation of their professional dismantling of the skywalk was brilliant.
"The Connector" adds no more street "connection" than the Great Hall did. You make it sound as if connecting Winthrop Square with Federal Street is some type of new revelation in this change. It isn't. It's on VE shrinkage. Plain and simple.
As Boston grows up and becomes more of an 18 hour a day city instead of a 10 hour a day city, retail, restaurants and shared meeting space in a crossroads/downtown building MEANS SOMETHING to the extended hour vibrancy of a city striving to become more lively and world class.
Well, I live in NYC and have lived in Boston, too. When I see something here or there that looks like something here or there, I mention it.
I am not disparaging Boston and I don't brag about NYC. My Shed / Great passage comment was an honest question.
I am adding my thoughts and observations. Which is what this thing is about, no? Why is that a problem?
They promised the city something and they have twice VE'd it back. It's time to send a message and establish precendence with these developers who VE everything and laugh their asses off.
So they are now saying "We will do 91% of what we promised in our winning bid". Sorry, Rover, that can't cut it.
The city needs to remember its position in this. Raise the bar. Boston is not Dubuque.
Where'd I ever mention a skywalk?
The NYC comparisons always......
Raise the bar.
Do you ever stop to consider that maybe you personally care a lot more about this stuff than 99.9% of the population, and therefore your opinion might not carry the day?
If you want to make the perfect the enemy of the good, and would like the project halted (another poster's take, not yours) over this be my guest. But, don't cry in your beer when the rest of us blow it off as an extremely minor detail in a place none of us ever expected to spend time in. In the meantime we get a new tower and 200M or so of improvements around the city. Still seems like a good deal to me.
The one and only reason this "reconsidered" change is being made is for the Benjamins....