Quote:
Originally Posted by trueviking
Its lazy architecture...no two ways about it.....its indefensible....it doesn't have to be a showpiece....but the exchange district deserves to have architects spend more than three minutes considering their designs.....it looks like a draftsman designed it.
even beyond its lazy design, it is repellant at the ground floor...it has parking at grade...that is unacceptable....
i agree...all anyone can ask for is a reasonable building....this isn't that....it can be simple and clean, but it still needs to be considered.....it's disappointing that someone would take such a prominent site and care so little....its not about cost at all...its about effort....even using metal panel, you could do something of interest....there was just no effort.
It's disappointing that they gave HAF money to projects that care so little about the public realm....I'm pretty sure UDAC hates it too, but they have no teeth to stop it.
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I know about this building because I am in the consultant group - but the owner dictates all the choices on this design. Even if you were the Architect, it wouldn't look much different. Owner wants parking (and is paying lots of $$ for it), has argued successfully that ground floor commercial shouldn't be required (again, maybe not your cup of tea, but the newish building on Bertha a stone's throw away has had vacant ground floor commercial since the day it was built - 10 years ago now?).
Again, it needs to be compared to what it is now for a fair judgement, its currently a single storey, vacant 1970s warehouse.
You can cry "National Historic Site" till you are blue in the face, but all of the necessary departments at the City has OK'd everything you see. This will be putting about 80, high quality apartments (way better than what the pretty pumphouse offers) into the area. Maybe just enough new people that the Bertha building can attract some tenants for their commercial space.
As an aside, I do find it interesting how much you come to the defense of the pumphouse design - knowing the track record of the Architect. This is a firm that basically designs with the sole purpose of shopping it around for awards, and as been proven recently, can end up with buildings that get torn down in record time when said award winning design proves to be all looks and no substance. The pumphouse IMO is a great example of this - I can't imagine anyone actually wanting to live there long-term, given the shortfalls in it's usability. Take a good look at the floor plans at this building and tell me you can still defend this design - beyond what you see from the outside?