Will The ICA Change Boston’s Stodgy Architectural History?

Boston’s Institute of Contemporary Art, with its striking cantilever overlooking Boston Harbor, may be the most architecturally significant building to be built in the Hub in a generation. “Four decades ago the completion of a City Hall in Brutalist concrete sent the city’s cultural guardians into a panic. Since then, with a few exceptions like the John Hancock Tower, the city’s architectural aspirations could generally be summed up in one word: brick.” But the ICA, which stands in a largely undeveloped area at the moment, will eventually be more than a stand-alone monument to creativity: “Viewed through a maze of new buildings, the structure could wield the force of a wonderful surprise.”