JTF, you and I are aligned on a large number of things, but in this case mine wasn't an urbanist argument, nor is "The Geography of Nowhere" strictly a new urbanist book, though urbanism is clearly the foundation of Kunstler's writing. That book also addresses/laments disposable architecture and the rise of generic, crummy "cartoon" buildings with planned lifetimes, built to grab the attention of drivers hauling ass down roads that could be in any town.
Kunstler writes often of "sense of place," and while that most often (and most easily) is associated with urbanist designs, it can also be created through iconic architecture. The book is worth a re-read (for me too), but the reference was appropriate.
Regarding my mentions of the Skirvin that a few people have gotten hung up on, nowhere have I ever claimed the two buildings were comparable in history, community value or usability. All I meant was that somewhere along the way we (the community) decided that the Skirvin was important enough to keep around, even if it cost more to do so than to tear it down and build new, and even if it didn't function quite as perfectly as a modern building.
It was a values choice, not a practicality choice. We (sometimes the public sector, sometimes the private) have made similar values judgments on a few other buildings (notable: Gold Dome, many buildings in Automobile Alley, Bricktown, and elsewhere), but often we decide the fate of a structure based on practicality only, and some of those decisions have been extremely regrettable in hindsight.
My personal opinion on Stage Center: if the architectural community tells us it that it is important and irreplaceable, I would defer to them. I have been a fan of architecture and design since I can remember, and I recognize just because some architecture (or art, or music) might not be my personal taste that doesn't mean it's not important.
That said, I would hope that if it is saved, the lifeline comes from the private sector not the public. If someone wants to step up, be a champion for that building, and do so in a way that makes it viable for years to come, who am I to say they should be spending their money on something else?
And I do think, like David Pollard pointed out, there may be some ways to preserve the building yet make it more sensitive to the urban fabric around it and have it fit/function better within its rapidly-changing environs. If that can be done, I'm all for that too.
But if a white knight doesn't step forward, I think the building is done for.
Sorry to regurgitate all of that at once, but I've been out of town + busy and haven't been able to catch up on this thread.
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