As you can see, a massive glass walled building like this one in Midtown ends up having a rather unusual effect in just mirroring back the buildings around it..
As to the "glassification" of New York, let me see if I can find a recent article..I know there was one in Architectural Review...
Well, I could only get part of an article that talks about the ecology of this ( you have to be a subscriber to this magazine to get the rest of this article).
Gives you the idea though , from one perspective
Rethinking the All-Glass Building
Is it time to end our love affair with the all-glass
building? A lot of proponents of high-performance, green design
certainly think so—while other respected architects, including some
leading green designers and energy experts, argue that all-glass can
work well if done right.
From Shanghai to Las Vegas, Abu Dhabi to Frankfurt, highly glazed
façades have been in the vanguard of high-rise, high-design buildings
for the past half-century. Some of the world’s most prominent “green”
skyscrapers, including New York City’s One Bryant Park (the LEED
Platinum Bank of America skyscraper) and the New York Times Tower, wear
the mantle of green with transparent façades. But there is a high
environmental cost to all that glitter: increased energy consumption.
Until new glazing technologies make technical solutions more affordable,
many experts suggest that we should collectively end our infatuation
with heavily glazed, all-glass buildings.
...
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