LOL Millennium Park is great. And it and its environs are a rather perfect example of why this design is pretty darned good. You obviously have learned just enough academic design jargon to make yourself completely useless. ;-)
Discovery Green in downtown Houston is another very good example in a similar situation (convention center, hotels, etc.)
Why is it bad design to build hotels in a park as opposed to building an art museum in a park? (You're going to have to think outside your jargon-filled box here and imagine that Myriad Gardens and the new park are one park with the hotels in the park, just as you have imagined that Millennium Park and the various choppy sections of Grant Park are one park with the art institute also part of the park). What else, if anything, is "bad design" about the placement of the hotels in the C2S design?
Oh, by the way, the "bad design" of placing the hotels in the c2s proposed spot is superior to either of your choices because it keeps them closer to the core of downtown, as well as close to the convention center. Your proposal pulls them further from the core, making them more reliant solely on convention center business, and, dare I say it, makes for a much more spotty plan, which would more likely fail to achieve critical mass.
Somehow, you seem to have gotten the idea that core to shore is or should be all about the park and nothing else should be allowed to intrude on your imagined acre upon acre of green grass between Myriad Gardens and the river. That's not what Core to Shore is about. It's all about an overall development of the core to shore area, including some well-designed park space.
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