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Aardvark86

All-Conference
Oct 12, 2021
1,971
2,995
113
Is the old Pfizer HQ going to collapse into a pile of rubble?

I guess the push for affordable housing conversions by stacking another 11 stories on top of a high rise got a little 'dizzy with success,' to borrow a phrase from that Dzhugashvili fellow.
 

GesterHawk

Heisman
Jan 3, 2023
19,871
38,665
113
Confused Gary Coleman GIF
 

baltimorened

All-American
May 29, 2001
7,140
5,285
113
Is the old Pfizer HQ going to collapse into a pile of rubble?

I guess the push for affordable housing conversions by stacking another 11 stories on top of a high rise got a little 'dizzy with success,' to borrow a phrase from that Dzhugashvili fellow.
nm
 

lucas80

Heisman
Jan 30, 2008
13,204
30,993
113
Is the old Pfizer HQ going to collapse into a pile of rubble?

I guess the push for affordable housing conversions by stacking another 11 stories on top of a high rise got a little 'dizzy with success,' to borrow a phrase from that Dzhugashvili fellow.
So, the moral of the story is don't have affordable housing?
 

lucas80

Heisman
Jan 30, 2008
13,204
30,993
113
No, the moral of the story is don't repurpose buildings that weren't meant for that in ways that renders them structurally questionable.
You should have said that instead of digging at the attempt to provide housing. Seems like an engineering mishap.
 

Aardvark86

All-Conference
Oct 12, 2021
1,971
2,995
113
You should have said that instead of digging at the attempt to provide housing. Seems like an engineering mishap.
It's literally what they were doing, and I'd wager it's a near certainty that the only way the developer could have a remote chance of cost-effectively repurposing a downtown office skyscraper in Midtown for 'affordable' housing would be add unit capacity to the footprint.

And let's be honest, beyond that, the idea that you're going to put "affordable" housing at 42d and 3d avenue is profoundly silly. I know it's nice and cool for the kids to aspire to live in the City, but we can't all live at Gracie Mansion, and Manhattan is Manhattan, which is to say, not affordable. Except, I suppose, that if those units ever do become available (ie, after remediation, litigation, a possible bankruptcy by one of the development partners, etc.), they may not be affordable from a cost to build perspective, but they may well be incredibly affordable from a demand-price perspective now that this has occurred.