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I'm loving the crown on WP East. Hopefully it lights up bright.
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Here
66-Story Wolf Point Tower To Break Ground With New Look By David Matthews | September 30, 2016 1:26pm | Updated October 3, 2016 6:01pm Quote:
https://assets.dnainfo.com/photo/201...extralarge.png https://assets.dnainfo.com/photo/201...extralarge.png |
Looks really good. I love the site layout.
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The new renderings look pretty good, and they certainly make for a more cohesive whole with WPW.
I am a bit worried about the seeming lack of retail though. Those big garden plazas by the riverfront seem like they deserve a cafe, a restaurant, a coffee shop, etc. And with 2/3 of the towers (now including the only one with frontage on a thru street) going all residential, they're foregoing opportunities for that kind of thing. |
This iteration of the south tower looks better than the last two.
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- AFL-CIO Building Investment Trust Hopefully it's a cafe or white table cloth restaurant and not a dry cleaner and nail salon... |
Always post the link to the original story.
https://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/2016...ound-next-year The notch on the east tower seems to equal the roof height of the west tower and the setback on the south tower seems to equal the height of the east tower. If that setback on the south tower does equal the roof of the east, it appears visually at least the to the top of the structure is more that 200'. The 950' figure may still equate to the underside of the top most occupied floor. That central thrust/blade may be mechanical/ornamental. It will probably be a few years before we have an exact figure, I'm just eyeing it. Quote:
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Oh shit my bad I thought I added a link.
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The South and East towers may be the sexiest renderings I've ever seen....
I'm aroused |
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A bit late for them, but last month I think the Apparel Mart just finished punching out another row of windows in the formerly blank wall... |
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^ Time to get on the phone ... "Hey, Heneghan Man!"
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Happy to see they got rid of the spire on the center tower; it just looked tacky (i.e. literally tacked on à la Trump Tower) from previous iterations. If I had to guess, the center tower is probably about 1100'+ if you take into account WPE's currently known height of 750'.
This is a very handsome development shaping up here. Very Chicago. Oh God, I said handsome... |
Just eyeballing the south tower looks about 30 stories taller than the east. Both look good to me!
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Check out this dope ass video of Wolf Point West
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^First time I noticed the fitness center is at the top of the building. That must be the best workout view in the city, straight sightlines down two branches of the river (for now).
That really exemplifies one of the bonuses in newer rental towers which now usually have more than one amenity floor. You can rent the cheaper unit with no view sightlines on a low floor, but have access to roof decks and community rooms with views sometimes better than than the highest priced units. |
Anyone notice that "Editor" over at ChicagoArchitectureBlog has been ignoring this news ever since we called him out for not only being wrong about it but also being smug about it? The guy is acting like a baby hahahaha
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Thank your alderman...
From the most recent 42nd Ward newletter: "The upcoming phase 2 will include a 660' tall building with 700 residential apartment units, amenity retail space and accessory parking at 313 W Wolf Point Plaza." Further: "As mentioned above, Phase 2 will have less height, less site coverage and less density than what is allowable under PD 98 and previously approved. The allowed uses have not changed and the development will not deviate from the allowable onsite parking limits, which the Alderman insisted should be some of the lowest in all of downtown Chicago based upon proximity to public transportation and the walkable nature of River North. The following design modifications were negotiated based upon residential concerns raised at the time of initial project approval." |
"The Alderman asked the developers to reconsider the height, density and site coverage based upon ever-increasing traffic in River North and the fact that the Wolf Point site is landlocked."
Sit and spin budday. |
New details released via Alderman Reily are explained and shown in a post from the Chicago architecture blog. Wolf Point South appears to be 950 feet still, so no supertall :(
http://www.chicagoarchitecture.org/2...f-point-south/ |
At least we have 4 years to lobby for a height increase...
As long as the finished product is optimal I can't complain, but I highly doubt a marginal increase in height or volume would suddenly flood the streets with traffic. |
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Also... BTW Chicago Architecture blog on behalf of the forum. You're Welcome! ... for all of the material you get from this forum. Let us know if you want some of our stale Cheetos. |
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A building's height is such an arbitrary thing to obsess over. I've never understood why people on this site put such little emphasis on a building's design and maximum emphasis on a building's height. So strange. I remember when I was a kid, being seriously bummed out when the Petronas Towers stole our title of WTB. Ever since then, I've cared very little about a building's height. Unless we soon build something taller than 3,000 feet, I'll continue not caring. |
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Some locations need the vertical reach to make a grand visual impact. If this was a mid-block project perhaps, but is at the confluence of the branches of the river and is visually important. People here don't put such little emphasis on design. Where the hell have you been? Feel free not to care about height, but from many of your responses, you're not necessarily visually observant when it comes to location impact. With this being at the spot where Franklin/Orleans jog, a better vertical exclamation is warranted. |
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Btw, what do you do during the winter?
And has anyone ever thought to run a glass-ceilinged tour boat all months that the river isn't iced over? |
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If there was a height reduction I doubt it was just at the bequest of the Alderman. The developers probably realized that condo sales aren't coming back anytime soon with Millenials all making half a mortgage payment a month towards student loans. They also probably realize that it's maybe not the most prudent thing in the world to break ground on a 750' tall apartment tower with max density given the current frothiness of the market. They are entitled to that density, so I doubt they are planning on just throwing it out, hopefully it shows up in the form of a maxed out WPS tower in the early part of next cycle.
This is probably just a case of a developer saying "hey, we don't really want a building that big right now, why don't you take credit it for it?" It's not as if they actually lose entitlements by not using them all now, they can cram extra SF into the big boy on the South parcel. |
https://assets.dnainfo.com/photo/201...extralarge.png
Missed this post, have to say this is an improvement! Not stellar or signature but at least solid. I actually perfer the first design for the south tower and the second design for the east tower. |
Kinda reminds me of Rockefeller in NYC.
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But, the Alderman seems to have realized that access to the WP peninsula is limited and the total density granted for the project might be too much for 3 buildings plus nearly 1,500 parking spaces. Better to allow WPW and WPE to be built out, determine how serious the traffic problem is and then determine how much more density can safely be added to the peninsula. If WPS doesn't overburden the property, it could still be a supertall. |
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Traffic in the loop and river north sucks at rush and has for a looong time now. The idea that Reily just suddenly realized this is laughable. |
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Most of the worst drivers I've seen, or folks doing the craziest maneuvers, are usually Uber/Lyft drivers. Folks from the suburbs, with limited experience driving in the city, who aren't used to driving in confined spaces while trying to read a map on a phone and locate customers on crowded sidewalks. |
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Because it might sink? |
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There, I've solved the traffic problem you've suggested my be an issue. I think that the planners who gave the okay in the first place know more about it than the alderman. |
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In general, Chicago has some very bad and dangerous drivers; they're usually in cars with out of state plates. Also, never trust a car without a city sticker. |
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The development team paid for a traffic study and hired KLOA to do it. The study recommended new signals on Kinzie and some other modest changes in the neighborhood, which are being implemented. Of course, KLOA aren't urban designers. They just tell you how to get the streets moving at a certain level of efficiency given a certain level of traffic, they wouldn't recommend visionary things like a new street or new river crossings. As for the height reduction - not sure there even was a reduction, since the plans were kept intentionally vague for so long. Architecturally, these buildings are so slender that they will have pretty much the same visual impact as a supertall. I'm very happy with the appearance of these towers (even if the floorplans are crazy inefficient). The stupid dick-measuring contest of numerical height doesn't really interest me. This forum only encourages that kind of lizard-brain thinking by separating supertalls into a whole other forum.... |
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^ Damn Ardecila, you've taken a strong anti-height turn these days. Did you recently have a nightmare about falling out of a tall building or something? ;)
Anyhow, I agree but I will say that this site deserves something bold and prominent, and that should hopefully be delivered by the south tower |
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