High-rise office developers and tenants are eager to post their company names and logos in lights on new office towers, but the city has historically made it difficult to do so.
The Boston Redevelopment Authority has had an informal approach to its signage rules with little in writing to guide developers; however, a spike in office construction has prompted the board to work on a new, more formal sign policy. Until the past few years, only about a half dozen corporate signs could be found atop the city’s tall buildings.
Recent projects near the waterfront, though, have included prominent corporate signage, and more requests are soon likely. A Redevelopment Authority spokesman told the Boston Globe that the preference is for distinctive looking buildings to dominate the skyline, not brightly lit signs.
The new rules will be treated more like guidelines, the starting point for negotiations in many cases, the Globe reported.
Related Stories
High-rise Construction | Jan 4, 2016
Top high-rise innovations of 2015
A crowdfunded skyscraper in Colombia and Jerusalem’s wild, pyramid-shaped tower are among the landmark projects featured in the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat’s annual yearend review.
High-rise Construction | Jan 4, 2016
Top tall building predictions for 2016
Jetpack-based firefighting, pixelated towers, and high-rise rentals are among the innovations and themes coming to the tall buildings market in 2016, according to the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat.
High-rise Construction | Dec 18, 2015
Architect Mark Foster Gage proposes wildly ornate Gothic skyscraper for NYC
The 102-story tower, 41 West 57th Street, will have glass walls, balconies, and a carved stone façade.
High-rise Construction | Dec 8, 2015
Architect Eric Parry unveils design for London’s tallest building
At more than 1,000 feet, 1 Undershaft will rival The Shard in height.
High-rise Construction | Dec 8, 2015
Saudi Arabia secures funding for world’s first kilometer-tall skyscraper: Jeddah Tower
The tower will overtake the Burj Khalifa in terms of height, but how long will it remain king?
High-rise Construction | Nov 28, 2015
Anorexic skyscrapers keep popping up in Manhattan
One project slated to begin construction next spring is designed to be only 47 feet wide.
High-rise Construction | Nov 23, 2015
London approves designs for a 62-story tower
Scheduled to start construction next year and open in 2019, the structure will be London’s second tallest, after the 95-story Shard.
High-rise Construction | Nov 17, 2015
CTBUH awards '2015 Best Tall Building Worldwide' to Bosco Verticale
Designed by Italian architect Stefano Boeri, the building design was applauded for its “extraordinary implementation of vegetation at such scale and height."
High-rise Construction | Nov 12, 2015
SHoP unveils Brooklyn supertall tower design
When completed, the 90-story tower will be the tallest building in the outer boroughs of New York City.
High-rise Construction | Oct 26, 2015
Recent skyscraper boom benefits New York construction industry
CTBUH reports that luxury residential construction, slenderness aspect ratios, and construction in "fringe" areas have all increased.