Building for the Ages

Building for the Ages

Lately, it feels like everyone I meet is locked into this forward-thinking mindset around health and wellness—what people are calling "Medicine 2.0." Names like Huberman, Hyman, Attia, and Sinclair are everywhere. They are rewriting the playbook on how we age, making it feel like humans are outpacing even the buildings we live in when it comes to longevity. This?got me thinking about buildings in a big way last month when my wife and I were wandering through the Acropolis in Athens. There we were, marveling at structures that have stood tall for millennia while much of the city's more modern architecture crumbles into mediocrity. How did we, as a society, lose the thread on building for the ages?

Outside of a few gems, the architecture in Athens just doesn't hold up. Sure, there was a spark of creativity between the 1930s and 1970s—designs roughly inspired by Le Corbusier, Mies Van der Rohe, and the European modernists. But it's clear, as time has passed, that these structures don't age with the same grace as the ancient ruins. So, what happened in the decades that followed? The 80s? 90s? 2000s?

And it's not just Athens. So many cities have this same story. The places we hold up as the most beautiful in the world—Paris, Barcelona, London, Florence—they still stand tall because their historic architecture survived. Walk through those cities, and the buildings around for centuries far outshine anything built in the last fifty years. The modern stuff is easy to ignore, hidden in alleys or overshadowed by something grander from another era. It's the design and, more so, the craftsmanship and dedication to detail that set these buildings apart. There was pride in the craft that is rare in today's development.?

But why did we stop building with that spirit? If we love these historic cities so much, why aren't we pushing for the same kind of architectural soul today? My guess is twofold: money and lack of imagination.

Take New York's Financial District. It's like a treasure chest of American architectural history, packed with iconic skyscrapers that symbolized Wall Street's dominance. Now that many on? Wall Street have dispersed to New Jersey, Texas, or South Florida, several of those buildings are being converted into residential spaces. And while some of these transformations are beautiful, many of them—especially the post-1950s office buildings—are just plain ugly, built without any real thought for aesthetics, designed purely for function.

The developers who are buying these buildings are trying to make homes out of spaces never meant to be homes. It's like forcing a square peg into a round hole, and the results are just as awkward. Instead of keeping these structures alive for another 100 years, we're setting ourselves up for more teardowns in a decade.

Here's the thing: we need to let go of what isn't working. Rather than clinging to these uninspired office buildings, we should give developers the freedom to start fresh. Let them tear down what's?ugly, design something that can stand the test of time, and in doing so create a building for the ages.

Let's do this-

Shaun

Atchuta Neelam

Real Estate Lead Generation | PropTech Entrepreneur | Founder of RealSuperMarket.com & ListCentral.Us | Property Data | Data-Driven Strategies

1 个月

Good insight

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Derek Chan

CEO at Red Leaf NY feat. Visual Twin for Real-Time Visualization

1 个月

What would be the right incentives to encourage today’s developers to build for the ages?

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Stephen Nuckel

Owners Representative/Construction Consultant

1 个月

They don't build them like they used to. A subject on my mind lately. A couple of weeks ago the City of Lake Charles Louisiana took down the Capital One Tower, a 22-story empty hurricane damaged building that I worked on back in 1982-83. Back then Lake Charles didn't have a building over 4 stories tall, so it was an odd duck, or someone's boondoggle; a gleaming blue glass modern tower that belonged maybe in Houston or Dallas. When it was finished there were no tenants lined up to fill it. It suffered extensive storm damage in 2005 and again in 2020. The second hurricane did it in and it stood there like a sad relic until it was imploded on September 7th. It was here for only 41 years. This is now the 3rd building that's been demolished that I have worked on or built. All of them kind of doomed from the start, wrong place, wrong size, wrong use. I agree with you, there are probably tens of thousands of buildings like this all over the country. Let's knock them down and build new and better ones.

Eric Rosen

Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker at Compass

1 个月

When I was last in Vienna a "new" building was one built after 1900. It's an amazingly beautiful city with many, many old buildings. They don't just teardown older buildings to put up something flashy and 100 stories tall.

Keith Lee

CEO at Locust Park Capital | Real Estate LP/JV Equity & Debt Finance NYC | MIA

1 个月

Very well said! ??

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