TheKingEast
Senior Member
What a downgrade from the historic buildings and mature trees there
Developer didn’t even try with this one.
What a downgrade from the historic buildings and mature trees there
Developer didn’t even try with this one.
Surprised and disappointed that the city allowed this with the older building onsite al all the hundred year old trees that will be goneDeveloper didn’t even try with this one.
Still going to be a spandrel-encrusted Aqua-lite monstrosity.
*It's the developer that drives cost targets and material efficiencies* G&C designs to what the client orders. If construction can only cost X dollars, then the design choices will reflect that budget.I don't actually mind the tower design concept. But - it's G+C so the concept is going to be absolutely bungled beyond belief with crappy material choices and awful spandrel with a side of three million mullions.
The podium on the other hand is terrible in concept and will surely be worse in execution.
Yes, budget is an important factor. But firm is just as important. There are plenty of firms that are able to meet the tight budgets of most developers and create an acceptable end product. architectsAlliance, Hariri Pontarini, KPMB, Zeidler, CORE, and many, many more produce good-looking buildings probably 75% of the time. It also depends on how much each firm is willing to sacrifice design to meet budget constraints. Different firms have different tolerance levels for "value engineering".*It's the developer that drives cost targets and material efficiencies* G&C designs to what the client orders. If construction can only cost X dollars, then the design choices will reflect that budget.
Personally i think a fritted glass on the balconies would do wonders here to strongly contrast the brick base, and hide the spandrel.
They didn't even hide that it will be signature G+C window wall/spandrelfest. And is that trim moiré or is it intentional?