Quote:
Originally Posted by Jstaleness
The car may have had a strange name but the design and lines were much cleaner than this current building. There must have been a sale at Happy Harry's.
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That's because in the automotive world, you have stylists who's responsibility is to design attractive vehicles, and the designs must be approved by management to be attractive to the consumer (of the era). If the vehicle is unattractive or deficient in a functional manner, the public won't buy it.
Conversely, any developer can build any building, no matter how bad it looks, as long as he has money to throw at it. It appears the approval process has virtually no requirements for attractiveness, and customers are more concerned with location rather than how the building looks. It's the non-buying public on the street who suffers the most by having to look at it every day.