Quote:
Originally Posted by left of center
I certainly hope so. There are plenty of places to build 3-6 story residential buildings all throughout the city. Creating a new high rise neighborhood doesn't come easy, and brownfields like this (as well as the 78) are the best option for that to happen. LSE could not have been the great success that it was without the significant infrastructure investment it required.
|
Eh I'm not typically a fan of new highrise neighborhoods. They tend to look soulless since the architecture is all from the same decade with similar shapes/materials (see Hudson Yards). To my knowledge, JDL hasn't done a highrise that's not primarily a glass curtain wall - despite how well they executed One Chicago.
LSE isn't my favorite collection of buildings, but it actually works better than other new highrise neighborhoods because the older towers nearby (Prudential, AON, Harbor Point) blend into it, allowing the architecture to span 60+ years.
You can kinda see this in our Loop-adjacent neighorhoods too:
- 1990s/2000s - River North beige + blank parking podia
- 2000s/2010s - South Loop glassy towers
- 2010s/2020s - West Loop dark industrial chic