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strickn

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Everything posted by strickn

  1. Renderings for the inpatient phases are up on KPF's web site, along with description: http://www.kpf.com/project.asp?T=5&ID=299 The Methodist Hospital North Campus Expansion is intended to be the first step in the replacement of major elements of the Methodist Hospital on its existing urban site in the Texas Medical Center. Phase I involves the design of a new diagnostic treatment space for the hospital’s premier centers of excellence in Neurology and Cardiology and a new Emergency Department (ED), which will facilitate important adjacencies to the new centers. Phase I will also create patient space to support 280 acute and intensive care beds, and is designed to accommodate plans for future expansion up to 580 beds in Phase II. The project aims to create a building that reads as “complete” after Phase I, while still easily accommodating these future expansion needs. From a design standpoint, the project aims to dramatically change the outdated image of the Methodist Hospital through a design that architecturally coordinates the expansion with that of the adjacent Research Institute (also designed by KPF), thus dramatically transforming the presence of the hospital on Bertner Avenue. Our design achieves this in several ways: first, by creating a welcoming front door that leads to a large public atrium; second, by carefully planning wayfinding that enables clear and easy circulation through the new complex for patients, visitors, and staff; and finally by linking major public spaces and maximizing access to natural light.
  2. To give this thread new life, and the chance of learning something: Block 142, downtown, the first site I mentioned, is valued by the county at $15.6 million. 40ksf floorplates would be feasible (although the trend is not toward such large floors); it's a 62500sf site -- $250/sf. What kind of rents over what kind of size range would one need to get, being into the dirt for that much? Anyone care to show their calculations for our benefit, please?
  3. Every 800+ footer in the state was built when Texas *was* the developing world, like China is today. When these buildings reach the end of their design lives, will their investors see fit to reconstruct them? Now to your question. There are investors who have paid so much for their land (901-999 Louisiana, 3200 Post Oak, and so on) that the only revenue-generating thing it can be used for, besides a parking lot, under current tax codes, is a trophy property. But a trophy property need not be a very tall one. If you build something to command $40 per square foot rents, in fact, it's unlikely you would want to risk building two million square feet of it all at once: you could make a profit on your land purchase with much less construction than that. Will there come a time when enough large tenants want into a submarket for long enough without smaller buildings being built to absorb them (that a supertall makes sense for years to set in motion)? Well, the one time it happened before, it was a bubble. You know what the conditions would have to be for it to happen again. Either a second speculative property bubble, a proud homegrown corporation, a giant relocation, a mixed-use investment with residences on top, HAIF starts a wildly successful lottery ticket pool, or editor repatriates his advertising profits.
  4. Here we are: Note how different Three Allen Center looks when more than fifty floors. Since this got it wrong, I'm not sure whether the project, referred to above as HL&P, was from before 1983 when Three Allen Center was topped out. Anyway, the picture is p.87 from the February 1988 Connoisseur magazine.
  5. I think it's November 1986's Connoisseur magazine that had an article on Kevin Roche featuring a finished model of the tower, though no mention of the client, or whether it would have been part of the Allen Center series across the street. Of the three blocks northwest and west of Three Allen Center, I can't remember if it was on 265 or not.
  6. Vale's First Baptist Church sanctuary in Lake Jackson turned 50 last year and is intact. Easy to visit.
  7. "some of it is fine, and some of it is questionable" -- there were many modernisms, and all (that I know of of) the earlier great modern Texan homes had been what would be called more sustainable. One earlier one was open just a few days ago! http://events.kvia.com/Ship_on_the_Desert_Open_House/236196550.html
  8. What are the plans for the McKie & Kamrath dental campus now that the school can relocate?
  9. I just have a hunch that the path Subdude is describing for a good outcome is exactly the one Tel Aviv has made: that those choices are calcifying in too many ways, to now-predictable result. I'll talk about what more I see around Galveston Bay(than the patina of calamity) later in the day if the conversation hasn't changed too much.
  10. Keep the parking lot - just pick some of its spaces to be rotating collections, construction, and so forth. We pull up and come and go among them. There could still be 20 or more slots along Main, along the garden wall, and connecting the two, which have a more permanent interface and a bit of street-wall enclosure, but all in all I s'pose it is one solution to 'dissolving the boundary' brought up by HAIF above. And making this new part of the Fine Arts Houston complex be as diffuse as its hometown experience. For all of our casual glory, though, there's a definable advantage that Galveston has. I don't want to boil it down to just San Francisco's, the feeling of being beautifully vulnerable. This press of intense weathering and certainty of natural disaster is a special light of creative destruction on both places I can come by in no other way than through being put on the spot of 'here forever, gone tomorrow' with each visit. I think having a person yield in that way among art is a worthwhile yield for Galveston to sow, but I think it's more than that, and I'll reflect some more about it. And I think the building is best left alone, and left as an empty case beneath the museum-parts to brew other users.
  11. http://www.loopnet.com/Listing/15843402/3400-Church-Galveston-TX/?MPID=F9y75qH6w&SRID=&tab=Sale-Lease&PgCxtGuid=a4711514-b50e-445d-af85-8463a332a5c2&PgCxtFLKey=&PgCxtCurFLKey=PropertyRecord&PgCxtDir=Down
  12. http://tmagazine.blo...-museum-of-art/ http://www.washingto...m-doubles-size/ Tel Aviv, like Houston, is a creature of the 20th Century, a center of creation, and a city in love with the future. Its complex of buildings for the encounter of artwork took on the same challenge that ours is about to, and like ours, they hired an intelligent person's architect. But I think we run the risk of losing the heart of encounter with art by doing what they did. They grew by turning their back on the historic seaport from which they wanted to part ways; we likewise distanced our selves from Galveston. Their art world continues to be a world apart from what would nurture it. I think ours even more than old Jaffa/Joppa deserves to be a place of pilgrimage, where people have all come a little way wondering. I think it better rounds out the MFAH in the imagination to have this emplacement stand separately. I'd like to see Holl blur the line between sculpture garden and parking lot with a system of spaces devoted to permanent and temporary installation, but not too much in the way of shelters. I'd love to see him propose to spread out over & above the brewery at Sheppard Park in G-town. Let it be a stilted foundation and then, on ground lease, let private concerns come in and renovate around and underneath /afterward/.
  13. I want to note that I don't make fun of anyone, and, while both they and I are in earnest, I do know that this commission is not willing to take real risks (else they wouldn't have hired a recognized expert in taking expected risks).
  14. They also like it because it can span lengths with a pretty free hand. www.bendheimwall.com/press/pdf/MSU-Ath-Biz_6-09.pdf Also, at $130/ft^2, what it does with light is not any more special'n what else you could do; it speaks of indulgently secure clients who didn't demand pedestrian x,y, and z for all of that investment. Artist eyes love to see potent statements achieved with restraint, even though to me it looks like spelling things out all too densely. Part of the reason that tastes somehow follow the avant garde is that institutions in every-tier cities feel the need to be followed by other tastemakers, and the only way to play It safe is to bend rules somebody else is already bending. If your principles are too unexpected we won't know whether to applaud or blow them off.* Channel glass' use and diseconomy sort of compounds the 'envy me' ability of the client-and-designer's design. *and unfortunately I think Snohetta was considered mostly for that reason, and was lost after shortlisting largely because its San Francisco unveiling hasn't been more immediately envied.
  15. The (KC) Nelson-Atkins' corrugated siding stuff is called channel glass, and modernist architects like it because it wasn't around in the era of modernism so to them it looks un-unoriginal.
  16. True, Purdueenginerd. Would it be any better if the parapets rose another two storeys in the middle of each side, like the other towers? Would the vacuum in place of each alternating face have more oomph then?
  17. Tight. It gets me, I guess, that the only briefs to consider slivers of an inch are devoted to luscious blankness. If that's the real deal, a Carrara parking lot would cut much closer to the quick of memory. It gets me not because 'intricacy doesn't have to mean overload' (although if restraint can absorb emotions rich intent cannot, then once again let's have the blank tabula drive) but because: well, I'll have to think about it...
  18. The only thing better would be to plant sedum (a low water, low maintenance, low weight garden choice) across the roof of it for some relief and 'connection' in the concrete scene that the people above will survey.
  19. A slow news day: nothing going up in the past twelve hours. BHPB's tower lease extends another ten years from now, while it is for the petroleum division and not the mines outside Australia headquarters as I wrote. You saw that a consolidation downtown was the third alternative I completely ruled out. It is fun to speculate on 800 Bell's future (not to be the Exxon Building) including another single owner instead of partition for one mixed use or another. Since that review site remarks that many of BHPB Petroleum managers are Exxon alums, one imagines they'd enjoy it fairly well. But although BHPBP's building on Post Oak is full, and the other three towers of Four Oaks Place have a scant four available floors between them, I dunno what to expect. User Golyadkin [re?]posted Payne Rowlett's rendering of this tower on http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/showpost.php?p=5365456&postcount=11 this week:
  20. BHP Billiton keeps its outside-Australia headquarters next door: in 1994 the Chronicle says it leased a 90 ksf upon moving from San Felipe Plaza; now it takes five times as much ...more than their secondary head offices in London and Singapore, or their marketing centers in Singapore, Antwerp and The Hague, I'm guessing. If and when the Petrohawk conjunction goes through, do you think downtown Houston will lose one of its fastest rising tenants http://blog.chron.co...ing-in-houston/ or will BHP choose not to consolidate at Four Oaks Place? The first link says, "no flow of ideas upwards allowed."
  21. lockmat lately posted a paulkweton.com link to Morris Architects' 2008 proposal for this site. Thank you, lockmat! It's also good to see architects coming from Wien and beyond to Southeast Texas to work, as long as they're concentrating what can be distinctive about the place and then building from it.
  22. Agreed, N Judah. Possibly off-topic, Waco Baylor has been given a significant anonymous bequest / estate provision devoted wholly to benefit medical research now.
  23. Odd that they put one at the top of the second prow as well as atop the highest... would have felt like a backhanded honor putting up the hand-me-down tree. Even ironworkers get carried away this time of year. It wouldn't cost them anything now to have one on every floor.
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