Quote:
Originally Posted by Illithid Dude
I like how it keeps the 150 foot street wall, something that I think is very important.
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Its important but I don't think its sacrosanct on Spring because there are so many bldgs of that height that the average pedestrian wouldn't notice and if looking from afar, there is no real skyline as we like to think of .........bldgs of significantly varying heights......so that if one bldg is 3-4 stories than the rest, I don't think its a big deal. I get upset when the scale is completely out of whack.........a 70 story bldg next to one that is 5 stories.....but scale differences of a few stories are okay with me
On Spring I think what is most important is keeping the street wall at the sidewalk level............I think its what gives the street its sense of urbanity.......and having the architecture beneficially reflect the surrounding bldgs. Hellen's bldg doesn't have any of the ornateness and detail of the surrounding bldgs but by aping the window treatments of its neighbors, it fits in........and the cutout in the center of the bldg makes it interesting. Again, IMO.
I wanted to mention......a while back people were talking about flat tops vs spired bldgs. The LA developer who most tried to get around that LAFD requirement was Maguire. His building that got destroyed during the movie,
Independence Day, was an attempt to get around the LAFD requirement. I think its what makes the bldg interesting and iconic.
Its too bad Maguire got into trouble financially because he was a very visionary developer IMO. Had DTLA had the vitality of some other cities and their DTs, he could have done some amazing things. Even without that vitality, he created some of DTs best bldgs and helped bring about Library Square. Unfortunately, I think it was his vision coupled with DT's lack of vitality that knee capped him.