pyalberice, on Jun 12 2007, 09:07 PM, said:
Our firm is working with Central Methodist on an expansion plan that includes a family life center. The parking lot in question is only a temporary solution to provide parking for the cars that are now parked on the future construction site of the family life center. When the family life center is complete, the temporary parking lot will be developed into a building that is compatible with Church Street and South Lexington Avenue. The members of the Central Methodist who are our client are very eager to leave a positive legacy building to the city for future generations. Stay tuned.
I still do not and will not like the idea of losing such a unique building. However, if it comes to pass that nothing will be done to save the structure, I hope you are planning a building that either fits seamlessly into the historic architecture of Church Street, or that you'll take a cue from Asheville's other juxtapositions and build something daring that clashes wonderfully with its neighbors.
That's one of the problems I have with blank-faced wallflowers we've seen go up downtown lately. Modern architecture in Asheville is either so ugly or so boring that most people, myself included, think that local architects simply are not capable of providing a decent modern product. That's why many wish the city would adopt an official style, such as art deco, the way Santa Fe has done with adobe pueblo architecture. The rationale is that because architects can't build anything worth looking at, the ability to do more damage to the cityscape with their lifeless buildings should be taken away from them. I used to agree with this argument.
However, if you consider it, part of Asheville's appeal is its wildly contrasting buildings. The S&W and Drhumor buildings side by side. City hall and the courthouse. The Battery Park Apartments and the Grove Arcade. Even the Renaissance Hotel, as miserable of an urban participant as it is, next to the Thomas Wolfe House, and in the future 60 N. Market next to the Wolfe House. Asheville could benefit from some superior modernism, because God knows there is no good modern architecture in town now. The library, Civic Center, Wachovia Building, Griffin Apartments, and the Biltmore Building are ugly enough to make your eyes bleed. The BB&T Building is more or less innofensive, but it meets the streets in a wretched and deadening fashion, and streetlife around it thrives in spite of it rather than because of it. 21 Battery Park, the upcoming Pack Square visitors center and, yes, your 12 South Lexington are just plain dull. We need better, and this city deserves better than its been getting. I have no doubt you're a capable architect, so let's see you prove it. Either give us a building that looks like it last smelled of fresh paint in 1890, or give us a building that looks like clutch of crystals growing up out of the ground -- give us something that blends perfectly or something that's cheerful and refreshing and clashes as beautifully with its neighbors as the S&W Building clashes with the Drhumor Building.
We need more buildings that people would want to put on postcards, in short. Give us that, if this building is going to fall.
Edited by hauntedheadnc, 12 June 2007 - 09:17 PM.