Delaney | ?m | 5s | Trico Homes

General rating of the project

  • Great

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Very Good

    Votes: 4 17.4%
  • Good

    Votes: 7 30.4%
  • So So

    Votes: 6 26.1%
  • Not Very Good

    Votes: 3 13.0%
  • Terrible

    Votes: 3 13.0%

  • Total voters
    23
It looks awful to me. That counts as a significant negative effect.
 
44 homes, 12 classified and below-market affordable (with 10 being fully accessible) is worth the trade of 3 houses. It's not pretty, but probably doesn't have to be - although there is nothing inherent about affordable buildings that require them to look cheap (as this one does). The street design is highly questionable but obviously not the developer's fault.

Generally I rank projects like this in order:
  1. Does this increase density in an location / design that supports a more "urban" form and lifestyle such as walkability, transit usage?
  2. Is this project attractive looking?
Ideally a development would check both boxes, but for all the terrible, equally ugly multi-family going up in the deep burbs - thus failing both requirements - this isn't the worst project possible.
 
Couldn’t agree more. If this building was down on 10th street or in the Beltline I’d feel differently, but given it’s use and location I’m fine with it.

Often good urban neighbourhoods are a collection of multiple individual buildings with many of them banal or average mixed in with a few stand out buildings.
44 homes, 12 classified and below-market affordable (with 10 being fully accessible) is worth the trade of 3 houses. It's not pretty, but probably doesn't have to be - although there is nothing inherent about affordable buildings that require them to look cheap (as this one does). The street design is highly questionable but obviously not the developer's fault.

Generally I rank projects like this in order:
  1. Does this increase density in an location / design that supports a more "urban" form and lifestyle such as walkability, transit usage?
  2. Is this project attractive looking?
Ideally a development would check both boxes, but for all the terrible, equally ugly multi-family going up in the deep burbs - thus failing both requirements - this isn't the worst project possible.
 
Pretty much completed. Workers look to be some finishing touches.

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Very cohesive design, understated and sophisticated.

Seriously though, if you are going to build a cheap building, you could have just went with all brown siding and left it boring like a 70s apartment building. Why keep tacking shit on? Red squares of varying sizes, multicoloured WTF stone, white vents, orange over hangs over some decks, all sorts of shapes of windows, a "cornice".

I want to buy the architect a beer and ask him what informed his design decisions and what his vision for this thing was.

Something like this thing; cheap to construct and not an eyesore.
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Definitely not the belle of the ball, but good density on a street that isn't on a main drag. All the projects along 17th seem to be less than stellar. I hope that if they re-zone a street like 20th ave they raise the bar.
 
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Architects sometimes have limited input on buildings like this, Clients have a design vision that the Architect has to work around. Not sure if this was the case here, but it wouldn't surprise me given that the client is a homebuilder.

That is almost certainly the case here.
 
I wouldn't call it playing "devil's advocate," but I will say it did end up exceeding my expectations. I was expecting it to look far worse. I doubt it will age well though.

Very cohesive design, understated and sophisticated.

Seriously though, if you are going to build a cheap building, you could have just went with all brown siding and left it boring like a 70s apartment building. Why keep tacking shit on? Red squares of varying sizes, multicoloured WTF stone, white vents, orange over hangs over some decks, all sorts of shapes of windows, a "cornice".

I want to buy the architect a beer and ask him what informed his design decisions and what his vision for this thing was.

Something like this thing; cheap to construct and not an eyesore.
9663511a72fb4fee2cae0a5b0a001780.jpg

Ouch. Sometimes it hurts to know what could have been done. :confused:
 

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