Lobby as of this morning, where most of it was roped-off for floor polishing/sealing (7/15)
^My take (not that anyone's asking for it ; ) ) is that there is actually decent design and materials within here, but the elevation change portion of this takes up such a huge amount of space that even though the design at the flat portion is decent, the overall space fails as a "place"
The grade-change portion has those blank walls - which are actually finished in a high quality stone that doesn't come through in most photos, but has a nice quality-exuding effect in-person - nonetheless create an enormous blank tunnel. It confuses me why they didn't do anything more with this, especially since they didn't really cheap out on it. Maybe there will indeed be large-format artwork or murals or something - but if that's what they were doing, then why did they veneer the whole thing in nice stone if it were just going to get covered? Even some more transparent glass regions within those walls would have helped. There are lobbies on either side (residential at left, corporate at right); I get that they might have wanted some privacy, etc, but even some semi-translucent curtains or tinting or frosting would have made the space less cavernous than what's here now.
I really do kind of like the "retail" end in the level portion - the issue is just that there's not enough of it. To have a "public market" sort of effect, that would have needed to be 2x - 3x as long. But some credit is due for how sunlight-filled this is. That window facing the prego building is 3x tall stories high; probably the equivalent for quadruple height in typical stories. Photos don't quite do it justice; it is grand enough to feel more special than the typical double-height office lobby. IF this space were level-grade, public engaging/retail for it's full length, and book-ended by windows of that size at both ends, it would have indeed had a special effect that no one would think was "just another lobby"; yet, all of that commentary is for naught, since such wasn't possible here and was never a reasonable expectation
SO, we are back to the complaint of: why on earth are there those absolutely massive, 50-ft high monolithic stone walls caverning-off half of this thing. If they can do something about that, then this still fails as a "place," but at least is a perfectly pleasant enough pedestrian pass through with a few shops.