JuneBug, the Greystone is both Architecturally and Historically significant building.
Yes, your right, Buffalo has quite a few but I was referring to fabric and continuity that make the Greystone so valuable.
Buffalo right now is not a wealthy city even though it is gentrifying. No building we replace is going to integrate into the fabric of the community as well as the greystone.
If this were an architecturally and historically significant building surrounded by parking lots, then it might actually hinder redevelopment since developers would have to develop around it.
In the case of the Graystone, its presence is very well integrated into the surrounding buildings and neighborhood. Its redeveloped presence actually creates a better dynamic for redevelopment than a build new approach.
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