Quote:
Originally Posted by KevinFromTexas
I think some people here have too high a level of expectation for residential buildings. Most residential buildings are boring in design. Just ask Florida, California, and Hawaii, among others. It's why I wasn't so excited about residential development in downtown. There are some decent standouts, but most are just another tree in the forest. They aren't marketed in the same way that office buildings are. Residential buildings are marketed more inward since people are mostly interested in the furnishings, layouts, amenities, and the location, not necessarily the exterior design. Office buildings, though, they do that too, somewhat with their interior spaces, but the location is less important unless they're centering themselves around a hub of a specific industry. Their marketing gimmick is more about the exterior to make it stand out.
No, the design isn't amazing on this one, but it's far from being the worst. I would gladly trade this design for several others we already have, even without the height.
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I agree. With residential highrises dominating the skyline, we end up with a functional skyline, it serves its purpose, providing living space downtown, with the emphasis on the inside not the outside. That's what would matter to me the most, and the view. But we do have a few standouts, Austonian, 360, and soon to be 5th and West and certainly the Independent. Hotel wise, its mostly, meh aside from the JW, perhaps the Fairmont, and hopefully a twangy Virgin. Office wise, we come up short and doesn't appear that the ones being built feel the need to stand out. Again, functional seems to be the priority. Even the Frost falls short imo, pun intended, and One American Center has only one good side, and that's its east side. Its south side looks frumpy. This one looks nice if not spectacular, I do like the fact that its not sitting on a fat pedestal. Add this to our long list of functional, practical, high rises.
As far as LA, it has a dominant plateau of tall building, I'll take our variety of height. It makes for a prettier skyline, especially from a distance.