
Call me perhaps a bit strange, but while some will undoubtedly refer to Tower Bank Financial Center in Panama City as a majestic piece of architecture, I find it...less than (I borrowed the above image from the 'Soy Panameño' page on Facebook.) Yes, it is black glass, and yes it is sleek, and yes, it may be over to 250 meters in height...
Y sin embargo, al verla últimamente en las fotos de los foros de arquitectura y urbanismo, no puedo sino pensar que es otro edificio desproporcionado en la ciudad sin enlace a sus entornos. A raz de piso, exhibe todos los horrendos problemas que plagan a todos los 'modernos rascacielos' de Panamá: no conectan con el peatón. Ya se, ya se. Se va a volver mi capa y espada esta frase 'conectar con el peatón.'
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| Taken from skyscrapercity.com (always give credit when it is due) |
But when you think about it, does it really matter that you can view a gazillion photos of a skyline taken from a gazillion different angles and from a gazillion different buildings overlooking a gazillion other buildings (ok, I know, that is an awful lot of photos, angles and buildings) if at the end of it all, the poor schmuck who has to walk up to the building at the ground floor ends up getting a sore neck...or just simply doesn't really get to see what all the fuss is about unless he/she is a gazillion (last one, I promise) miles away from the building to actually appreciate it.
Digo, la majestuosa y enorme pared vertical verde de 8 X 2 1/2 metros presente en la foto en la entrada del edificio es bonita y todo, pero como se relaciona con el edificio? Con su entorno? Fue creada para mitigar [bloquear] la vista del edificio de al lado. La pared no es lo suficientemente grande para ser considerada como requisito de LEED o BREEAM, sobre todo con semejante estructura. Y se siente casi como que 'La Negra' (como se le ha apodado el edificio) quiere echarse a la calle de lo tan apretada que está contra la calle 50, por más que se diga que 'Hay acera.' Más José el borracho de la canción de Rubén Blades que soberbia dueña de la calle 50.
It is all about proportions, really, and being such a monumentally high tower, it ought to have a better reflection at ground level. It is what tends to bother me about these buildings. There is a proliferation of buildings which are getting a notorious 'Panama Style' label which is defined by: a large parking garage box at the base followed by another box at the top, albeit a more slender one...or in the case of one particular tower, one disproportionately large parking garage box followed by about 60 pizza boxes rotated 15 degrees or so spiraling upwards (see? no use of the word 'gazillion.') There are an exceptional and few buildings I have perused through which seem to invite people to walk around/among them, but those are for a different day.
Pero dejo de quejarme, ya que no he estado en vivito y en directo en PTY por un rato, así que vivo a través de lentes ajenos. Por lo que sepa a lo mejor de caminar por debajo de las faldas de esta 'Regia Señora' quizás me sorprenda alegremente y vea que tiene sus zapatos bien puestos.
Or maybe, just maybe, I'll get a shock when I look up and discover she 'ain't got no underpants.'
