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Here's all of the slides:
http://i.imgur.com/mALeBXLl.jpg http://i.imgur.com/yQC0C8ml.jpg http://i.imgur.com/00uoBDsl.jpg http://i.imgur.com/APnrJKjl.jpg http://i.imgur.com/8jqdEKul.jpg http://i.imgur.com/Fzf0KVQl.jpg http://i.imgur.com/N5hvqPUl.jpg http://i.imgur.com/R39DfYGl.jpg http://i.imgur.com/NqwHdAjl.jpg http://i.imgur.com/AuZQohIl.jpg http://i.imgur.com/nwxvE5Sl.jpg Please read this post at Curbed so people can't say I'm leeching traffic: 76-Story Rafael Viñoly Tower Would Be Tallest in South Loop |
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So that doesn't bother me much. I'm with you on twins, though. I hate twin towers. The only exceptions I can think of are Mies' LSD apartments. But like others have said I doubt that one will get built anytime soon, and, when it does, I'm sure the design will have changed. |
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we were very fortunate that the great recession stopped P/H from having exclusive design control of the entire south wall. |
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Anyone with concerns about this tower's design looking "70s" or whatever needs to go take a look at 432 Park Avenue in New York City. It's really beautiful. Or go take a look at the buildings they've done down in Hyde Park at the University.
Vinoly does solid work. http://www.rvapc.com/images-producti...29_tmp19BE.jpg www.rvapc.com That being said, I'm looking at this gigantic twin tower design and thinking, no way. No fucking way. I just don't see it ever happening. Not in Chicago. Not in the South Loop with all those NIMBY blowhards that will kill this thing... but here's to hoping! :cheers: |
I'd bet they get the first one done and then the market conditions will change and phase 2 will get delayed for another 10 years and then taken on by some other group with a different design. Phase 2s have a way of not happening.
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Not a bad design. The details will really make or break, but the impact will be amazing no matter what.
How dare someone build a big skyscraper in downtown Chicago. Think of all the traffic problems it will cause for it's neighbors :) And it will block the lakefront view from the south on Michigan Avenue. |
If the project fails it won't be due to NIMBYism
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I'd be interested in seeing one of the twins flipped on the N-S axis to reveal more of the bundled tubes to the north and provide more depth on the Roosevelt street wall, as well as more variation in the base.
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I don't know what's going to happen with Phase 2, but let's also keep in mind that Crescent Heights isn't a small, inexperienced developer.
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And yes we definitely dodged a bullet with that gimmicky P/H design. |
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The U of C business school is great, though. And it's a nice nod to Robie House, intentionally or not. But good riddance to that P/H pile of nonsense. |
I don't think shadows over the park will be an issue. The sun would be north of it for most of the year.
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http://i.imgur.com/APnrJKjl.jpg Oh, I just noticed: more bars in more places? http://digitaldaily.allthingsd.com/f...7/morebars.jpg lol |
The design is certianly interesting. However, I have mixed feeling with Chicago adding all of those tall buildings along the lakefront. I especially think the view to the north coming from the south has been messed up with the addition of the BlueCross Blue Shield and the apartment buildings built in the early 2000's.
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I suppose any tower on Grant Park is prominent, but it feels to me like a twin tower would work better asthetically alongside the Park rather than at a corner - somewhat like The Eldorado on Central Park West feels 'centered.' It might be better if the second tower was build first to ensure that the corner of the park is 'anchored' with an important building.
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