Tour Montparnasse, Paris When it opened in 1973, towering over the 14th and 15th arrondissements in the south of the capital, almost no one had a good word to say about the first – and only – skyscraper to rise in central Paris. Well, they hated the Eiffel Tower and the Pompidou too, at first, but the Tour Montparnasse has only got worse with age. From a distance it glowers obnoxiously over Paris’s sea of Haussmannian gray, while at street level, tethered to a neighborhood-blighting shopping center, it’s even worse. Its most deleterious effect was to kill off the possibility of any tall buildings in Paris for a generation: the capital essentially banned skyscrapers until last decade, though a new project by Jean Nouvel in the southeast is now underway. |
2 Columbus Circle, New York Edward Durrell Stone’s squat, stubborn update of Venetian Gothic architecture was reviled, when it first opened in 1964, as an abandonment of all the modernist principles the architect propounded at his Museum of Modern Art around the corner. As the home of the campy Huntington Hartford Gallery (the no-abstraction-allowed collection was nothing special, while the leather-clad lounge upstairs, called “The Gauguin Room,” served pseudo-Polynesian pork and pineapple skewers), it seemed to revel in bad taste. Over time the so-called Lollipop Building became a surprisingly lovable work of architecture, but its supporters were too late – in 2005, after the city refused to grant landmark protection, the architect Brad Cloepfil tore off the façade and gutted the interiors to make way for its current tenants, the Museum of Arts and Design. The resultant mishmash has pleased no one. |
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