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I Don't Wanna Lose "Who knows what we will find out there somewhere." Lucky (In My Life) New Life One Goal King Of Lullaby I DJ With The Fire "You see the walls around me Come on, let's raise the roof And so I'm spinning my best records tonight for you." "The past is all that's gone, The future is yet to come This moment is all our own, We should live this way, Just building up our day." No, i don't want to live this triangle i don't wanna be your clown now 'cause it's long to carry on" With playstation of Jey from Metal Gear Solid to Tekken 3 from Megabelts to Resident Evil just play for the fun 'cause we're gonna goin'on"
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We’d still like to see more towers in adventurous tones like green, gold, even red - but if it’s gonna be blue, we like this blue.And she is so blue" Too Much Of Heaven Dub In Life Living In A Bubble Move Your Body My Console They’re absolutely right, and during a period of Austin’s development where a lot of buildings look pretty much the same any effort to stand out is more than welcome. It’s funny that the architects mention twice that the tower is designed to subvert expectations to some degree. The tower’s color helps reinforce the expression of that organization while offering a counterpoint to what you might otherwise expect to see. The facade compositions include a fairly rigorous organization- carefully proportioned, leveraging construction efficiencies, and maximizing views.
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The shapes of the buildings are driven by site considerations- the neighboring Symphony, the Capitol View Corridor, the varying street characters, and the considerable topography. The color for the upper stories, sheathed in glass and blue metal panels, is intended to complement that in a thoughtful and perhaps unexpected way. The base of the building, where many people will experience it up close, is actually based upon local/nearby materials- warm limestone (found in the neighboring Symphony buildings) and copper metallic tones. We put a lot of consideration into the color palette as it can be an important design feature at both intimate and urban scales. Keeping that in mind, we asked politely if the Symphony Square project’s designers at R2L would give us a little background on these color choices, and they were nice enough to humor our perpetual tower tint obsession: According to its developers, the building should open sometime in 2023. In addition to its designers at R2L Architects, we’re getting interiors from local legends Michael Hsu Office of Architecture and landscape architecture from TBG Partners. We also know its vitals haven’t changed much since the first appearance of the project years ago, with 388 apartment units in a 32-story residential tower, a connected seven-level office building, and 5,000 square feet of retail space including a new office (and box office!) for the Austin Symphony Orchestra that previously occupied the site. Now that this tower’s officially broken ground and been caught in 4K thanks to a full-fledged press push by its developers, we know the project’s name on the residential side is the Waller, which might have something to do with the creek passing through this block - the name of the office side is still up in the air. Here’s how the tower looks from across Red River Street looking east - that’s offices on the left, tower on the right, the old Symphony Square even further to the right.