What? Klyde Warren Park in Dallas:
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From a purely utilitarian perspective you are right. Counterpoint, I would argue though it is worth some money to make things not look god-awful. Whether this is the right particular shade of lipstick to put on the pig is entirely up for debate. The weird archy bridge in Dallas being one I don't particularly like.gary kreie wrote: ↑Jan 18, 2023Yep. Lately, cities have decided that various forms of very expensive downtown bridges supported by soaring cable-stay arches are the way to change their skyline to be like San Francisco I guess. Old beautiful bridges in SF, St. Louis, Pittsburg, NY, Cincinnati, etc. really do need the support structures to cross formidable water obstacles and makes them beautiful. But what's hilarious about these new expensive signature skyline bridges in Dallas, Miami, Boston, etc. is that they are flanked by 1970's flat raised highway-type bridges that remain in use and that handle the bridge load just fine. I'm not sure how much the rest of the country is paying for these vanity project bridges over ditches and streets, but I hear the one in Miami is approaching a billion dolllars.
The Space Needle was stand-out until the building boom of the early 1990's. Then then second building boom recently "buried" it.symphonicpoet wrote: ↑Jan 18, 2023^It's not like we hold a patent on the triumphal arch. That would have expired long before America was someone's wet dream. The more the merrier, as far as I'm concerned.
And honestly, I'd strike Seattle from that list. The Space Needle is their only really internationally famous landmark, and it's not terribly prominent. Very much buried and only visible from a very few angles and locations. I was desperately trying to figure out whether something was filmed in Portland, Seattle, Vancouver, or some other random location the other day. Turns out it was Vancouver, but all three could quite easily pass for one another. Honestly, that's true of most North American cities. We're pretty generic, save for a few standouts. San Francisco, New Orleans . . . sort of New York. Kind of Chicago. But honestly, there's a lot more in common, even there, than different. A city's a city's a city's a city's a city. (Mind you, I like cities, so this isn't an insult. Just an observation.)
I love figuring out movie/TV locations. And I enjoy traveling, so there's often a certain element of nostalgia. (Oh yeah, the bricks in the Freedom trail! I remember that! That kind of thing.) And yeah, I say they're pretty generic for the most part, but that's not to say you can't figure them out, just that they're often not especially famous. Pittsburgh is easy enough from an aerial shot, but it's going to be harder to pick out from a street level shot that never pans up. Even a place as distinct as New York can look pretty darn unremarkable if you're not flying down the Hudson or in a few particularly famous locations. (Times Square, Central Park, crossing a bridge . . . ) If you're in the bottom of the street canyons and don't look up. (Or, gasp, not in Manhattan.) Which is why movies can use a place like us to believably double for New York every now and then. And when you're watching an older movie, and the city has changed dramatically . . . that's when it gets really fun!framer wrote: ↑Jan 18, 2023It's something of a hobby of mine to be able to identify city skylines around the world. That's just me, though. The overwhelming majority of people wouldn't have a clue, and very little interest, either.
I don't mean to say their skyline is unique but rather that they're the rare US city that feels pretty distinct from every other I've been too. Should have been more clear about that. I see the confusion. Their skyline is pretty typical, save right around the French Quarter, or if you're looking at the Huey P Long Bridge. But as Fradweebe wrote:The Space Needle was stand-out until the building boom of the early 1990's. Then then second building boom recently "buried" it.
But I'm really confused by the "New Orleans in unique skyline" claim. Not at all unless you count that weird Plaza Tower.
But getting back to the subject at hand, Dallas' skyine is underwhelming for a metro area it's size. But that again just furthers the argument that the DFW area is just sprawl.
Can you change what something memorializes. Sort of like carving a new name on a headstone. Seems like that what people were trying to do with the confederate statues but to date it seems like a losing argument. If people actually understood what the Arch represents there would be a vocal crowd demanding its removal because it represents 'the racist & Imperial ambitions of the American white patriarchy and celebrates the pillaging and castigation of the Nation's first peoples.'gary kreie wrote: ↑Jan 19, 2023The Arch is so monumental, I wonder if some future generation will change what it commemorates -- maybe for some great future American yet unborn. Most Americans don't know what it honors now -- namely the reason we don't speak French. I recall after 911, some folks proposed a giant flag pole on top and an American flag. (I'm surprised current MOLEG has hung a flag beneath it already.). We've already removed Jefferson's name. How long before it is renamed American Indian genocide memorial. Just sayin'.
You want to start speaking French again? It will take me some time, but I'm conceptually down with it.gary kreie wrote: ↑Jan 19, 2023Most Americans don't know what it honors now -- namely the reason we don't speak French. I recall after 911, some folks proposed a giant flag pole on top and an American flag.
If it's the paw paw dialect specifically then count me in. Vive le Grav-oy!symphonicpoet wrote: ↑Jan 20, 2023You want to start speaking French again? It will take me some time, but I'm conceptually down with it.gary kreie wrote: ↑Jan 19, 2023Most Americans don't know what it honors now -- namely the reason we don't speak French. I recall after 911, some folks proposed a giant flag pole on top and an American flag.
La ville c'est nous!
This sounds like a positive direction. I hope Jeff City does the same thing. No reason St. Louis should be stopping developers from building new housing.framer wrote: ↑Apr 16, 2024Here's a (rather confusing) article about local zoning laws in Dallas. The alarming part is that some state-level politicians are apparently trying to take zoning laws out of local hands, and enforce them at the state level. Let's hope Jeff City doesn't get similar ideas.
Texas Lawmakers Look to Take Zoning Changes Out of Dallas’ Hands
https://www.dmagazine.com/frontburner/2 ... CSTBVFIGQ8
I can't imagine Jeff City taking any action that helps St Louis or urbanist ideas. St. Louis City zoning stops few projects and I don't know of any good proposals that were stymied by zoning concerns. Maybe the county muni's would get more development if they had less control, but it depends on what state control looks like.mjbais1489 wrote: ↑Apr 17, 2024This sounds like a positive direction. I hope Jeff City does the same thing. No reason St. Louis should be stopping developers from building new housing.framer wrote: ↑Apr 16, 2024Here's a (rather confusing) article about local zoning laws in Dallas. The alarming part is that some state-level politicians are apparently trying to take zoning laws out of local hands, and enforce them at the state level. Let's hope Jeff City doesn't get similar ideas.
Texas Lawmakers Look to Take Zoning Changes Out of Dallas’ Hands
https://www.dmagazine.com/frontburner/2 ... CSTBVFIGQ8
Eww, hard no. The less things the doofuses in MOLeg have control over, the better.mjbais1489 wrote: ↑Apr 17, 2024This sounds like a positive direction. I hope Jeff City does the same thing.
I see your photo of Dallas shows that malformed tall arch with cables holding up a car bridge over a — crick. I think Dallas has been trying to think up a symbol that would separate their skyline from all the other lookalike square tower chiclet skylines. Like what St Louis, Seattle, SF, NY, & Chicago have.quincunx wrote:Just get rid of the highway, sheesh.


