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GoHuskies1984 t1_iyw3ygt wrote

I don't mind glass towers when they exist in clusters amid a dense urban space, this however looks too out of place.

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whybother5000 t1_iywatbh wrote

Water views! Quick drive to the games, concerts, and luxury shopping!

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nasty_brutish_longer t1_iywl4iv wrote

I believe that's phase IV.3.iii of the gleaming swamp metropolis envisioned in the early aughts for Secaucus Junction/Xanadu-American Dream.

Like everything else there, I'm surprised it's gotten this far, and not at all surprised at its clusterfuckedness.

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GreenTunicKirk t1_iywmaiy wrote

I wonder what that building is gonna look like in 20 years being as it’s right in the middle of the swamp

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pixel_of_moral_decay t1_iywoqjs wrote

The clusterfuck in NJ tends to come after.

No way a building that size in a swamp doesn’t have major issues in 10-15y when the developer moves on and someone else is libel. Then government entities having to get involved because it poses a imminent threat to safety.

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BeMadTV t1_iywq52z wrote

Gives me Oblivion and I Am Legend Vibes.

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objectimpermanence t1_iyyvzc7 wrote

I don’t get why people keep saying this with such confidence.

There are hundreds, if not thousands, of tall buildings in this country in areas with unstable soils along bodies of water. Some of them have been around for 50-70 years in places like Chicago and New Orleans with few issues.

The technology and building techniques needed to overcome the engineering challenges of these locations has existed for years.

Millennium Tower in SF and Surfside in Florida are rare exceptions.

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