Thanks to all who have viewed and commented on the project, I really appreciate it! It was a lot of fun to put together over the past year.
I'm not incredibly familiar with the Murray Hill neighborhood, but based on the time I've spent in Jacksonville and the article with images and descriptions on this website I can tell that it has a distinct image about it that can certainly be utilized by the whole city. One thing I loved about visiting Riverside and San Marco in particular was how they had subtle changes in home design--beautiful brick homes in San Marco and beautiful wood siding homes in Riverside. Murray Hill has the same thing going for it with the bungalow style from what I can tell. Edgewood Avenue also appears to be a strong thoroughfare that adds an infrastructural element to the expressive design gestures being made. What, then, regarding the way that Murray Hill and these other neighborhoods have formed distinct identities over the years, can be applied at the high-rise scale to downtown Jacksonville in order to create a yet-to-be-discovered level of cohesion? That's how urban fabric--something greater than an assimilation of objects within a generated infrastructure--can form in a place like Jacksonville.