owlmoose: (Default)
The SF Chronicle's architecture critic writes a review of a building just down the street from us.

As usual, I like what John King has to say here, about the building as well as the rest of the neighborhood. SF tries too hard to be a monument to the past, so it's nice to see a building that successfully tries to do something new and exciting.

We actually looked at one of the model units in the building back when they were still building it. Very nice. If we were looking to trade up, I think we might have thought seriously about it. It would be nice to live in a building with some common space -- the units here are all very separate, so there's not much community.
owlmoose: (Default)
There's an interesting article on SFGate today about city planning in San Francisco, a review of an essay examining SF's resistance to ground-breaking architectural design. The essay accuses the city's planners and residents of being over-attached to the Victorian style and allowing urban design to stagnate as a result. The author of the article concedes this, admits to being guilty of the same attitudes, and wonders if it will be bad for the city in the long run.

I don't have many complaints about living in SF, but this issue is definitely one of them. There's a powerful, vocal contingent that seems to want the city to be a museum to 1973, and architecture is a big part of that. While I agree that some people (ahem*Willie Brown*ahem) are a little too devoted to progress for the sake of progress, I think an automatic "change is bad" reaction is just as problematic. In my opinion, not enough change is just as bad for a city as too much radical change. A vibrant city is one that attracts new residents, new businesses, new kinds of people, and I worry that SF is not that kind of place right now. It's a very suburban attitude, and so short-sighted. Everyone complains about the lack of affordable housing, then the same people fight high-rise housing projects because they "don't fit with the image of San Francisco." I don't know what the answer is. Currently, the city is searching for a new city planning chief; maybe they'll find someone to help us break out of this Victorian-shaped box.

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