Quote:
Originally Posted by McBane
I get the feeling that people are annoyed not because of the demolition but because of what we're getting in place.
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Great point. I agree completely. It's a good building. Not indispensable in my opinion, potentially worth demo'ing for a substantial, well designed replacement; but certainly
not worth demolishing for ticky-tacky wood-frame townhouses that most likely won't even be around in another 50 years.
You'd think the builders would explore cost effective ways to incorporate that tremendous masonry base into their housing development plan. It's nine bays wide, which would appear to easily accommodate 3 side-by-side townhouses, and the masonry frame would seem to be able to support a one story modern overbuild easily.
Many (I'd bet a majority) of these townhouse developers are tasteless suburban quick-buck artist builders with zero interest or awareness about sound urban development or historic adaptive reuse (which can, in certain instances, be far more cost effective than the kind of wholesale demo and replacement that seems to be envisioned here).
I don't understand a building code that enables easy demo of structures like this while permitting slapping up of insanely hideous super cheap stucco-and-siding-over-2x4 lean-to sheds in their place, all while managing to make it very difficult for real quality developers to do more substantial higher quality stuff (think how long it took to get 205 Race started, eg).
By making developers of quality large projects jump through endless hoops to get to the finish line, it seems like the code by default channels most developers to pursue the path of least resistance and put up small-scale provisional crap like this. Pretty backward.