Quote:
Originally Posted by mrskyline
You have skyscrapers and other high quality architecture, but then you have strip malls, gas stations, surface parking lots and other junky utilitarian architecture close to downtown and throughout the city. To me, a lot of Houston felt like the wood shacks of Chicago before the Great Fire; something put up quickly for a short term utilitarian purpose to be later replaced by something better. I'm not saying everything outside of downtown was junky and I realize gas stations and power lines are important, but I was struck by how much Houston seems to have just sprung up with no thought for aesthetics. Contrast that to a place like Buffalo with its monumental layout and Olmstead park system. That is what I mean by permanent architecture.
|
So you haven't seen the Hermann Park/Museum District, Memorial Park system, Allan Parkway, Memorial Drive, Rice University area, dozens of well planned neighborhoods. Buffalo??? Come now....