Quote:
Originally Posted by Cirrus
Well, one of those is residential and the other is an office. Anyway I'll take the one with the halfway decent sidewalk presence.
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Well, yes, but there's no reason a residential building couldn't be designed in the same color scheme, using the same (or similar) materials, as the towers already existing in the development. I was unaware of any codified law stipulating that all residential towers had to be red, brown, and beige.
As for "street presence", it's a false equivalency argument. We're talking about the architectural aesthetics here, not how many multi-cultural people are crowding the sidewalks in the rendering. Great architecture and a vibrant streetscape are not mutually exclusive. Is a brown, red, and beige tower that defiles the clean design aesthetic of Colorado Center required for a vibrant streetscape? Or couldn't they simply match the existing complex with similar colors and materials and accomplish the same thing?
Sadly, "architecture" for urban enthusiasts in Denver ends at the second floor. I'm sure everyone would be thrilled if Denver was comprised of nothing but life-sized gray massing models, provided there was a streetscape, bike lanes, and plenty of pedestrian buzz. While I admire the push for pedestrianism, TOD, and streetscape vibrancy, Denver's approach disregards architectural merit in the process, and this mentality is exactly how we end up planting a CPV-style building where it visually does not belong, and with no sense of context for the surrounding site. Just as extending neighborhoods or creating new neighborhoods to achieve good urban design depends on context and adjacency, so does architecture.
All I'm asking for is to tone it down with the earth-toned Colotechture buildings, and give our city and metro area a fighting chance to avoid the appearance of being a master-planned community designed by one architect. Is that really such an unreasonable expectation?