Quote:
Originally Posted by Crawford
There's something crazy like 60 historic districts in Manhattan alone, as well as a number of new districts proposed. Then there are the "special districts" which are not historic, but they put extreme height and density limitations on a neighborhood. Special districts run in the dozens in Manhattan alone. Both historic districts and special districts basically freeze neighborhoods in-place.
The problem in NYC is too much regulation and anti-development bureaucracy. Again, it's extremely tough to build in NYC.
|
It's an old city, covered in old buildings. And to get something new built, something old is going to have to come down. I sometimes think these people haven't seen the city the protest about at all.
Quote:
Originally Posted by MIII;64F16488
The first time I went to Time Square the Mariott Marquis was not even topped out and I almost got robbed. The last time I went there, I was surrounded by brand new towers and families taking pictures like if they were in a Zoo. So yes I know Time Square.
NYC is mostly old if you take into account low-rise buildings, but if you only take into account towers above 600 feet (towers that matter), there is a balanced mixture of old and new.
|
News flash, there is more to Manhattan than Times Square. And yes, you can get robbed there today. But truthfully, that can happen anywhere in Manhattan.
Quote:
Originally Posted by MIII;64F16488
Let's say that I am just a foreigner nostalgic of one time in NYC when architects were a bit more inspired when they designed the city's tallest towers.
|
I'd say you were an old soul who has lived beyond your time. Because as much as you would like time to freeze in space for you (or travel back in time if you will), that can not and will not happen. Manhattan wasn't always covered in skyscrapers BTW.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Blaze23
I share your feeling on that point. I like 432 Park, but when you look at the new "tallest towers" going up in the city, none of them really stand out the way the ESB, the Chrysler and the Woolworth did in their time.
|
It goes without saying, it was a different time. But do you know that the Empire State didn't just grow up out of the raw earth? Do you know what stood before that classic?
http://www.hotelchatter.com/story/20...nd_34th_Street
A building many times better than the Drake Hotel that stood here earlier, The Waldorf Astoria.
Quote:
Originally Posted by drumz0rz
NY actually is faily obsessed with it's past. We have the Landmarks Commission which has designated TONS of buildings as landmarks, and we also have historic districts which prescribe requirements for renovations / new development to ensure the "feel" if the neighborhood isn't lost or altered through architecture.
As NY Guy stated, the original Drake was an unremarkable yet good looking building. In another city it might have been worth saving, but when you look around Manhattan you'll find dozens of buildings in the same style. The crown jewels are landmarked, the rest, no one will miss.
|
Manhattan is basically
drenched in these older buildings - literally from the Battery to the tips of Upper Manhattan. Nobody can have walked the streets and not seen it. As a matter of fact, I can remember a time (not too long ago) when people complained that the New York skyline was too "brown" and "old", and some still do. Sure, there are a lot of new buildings under construction, but overall, just a drop in the bucket. I think part of the problem is just that, the realization of just how many buildings there are in Manhattan.
Basically what I'm getting at is the Drake Hotel is gone, it won't be the last old building to come down. Manhattan is covered in Landmarks and historic districts. A lot of the older buildings have already sold what remaining air rights they had, so there will be no incentive to redevelop those properties (and not all of them will age well, though some will be suitable for conversion).
And finally, as I mentioned in another thread, I think if any of you owned that hotel, and could make a billion or two in redevelopment, well.....
www.432park.com