I can already tell we might as well link straight to the 1 St. Thomas thread...
Adma, is the "faux" mansard going to fall off or something sooner than a "real" mansard? It may not even be faux stone.
Archivist, we might say that about the French Quarter in 25 years...let's revisit the issue in 2035. What are those 70s houses made of or facaded with? Wood, glass, metal, brick, stone, fake stone (fauxite?), aluminum siding, stucco, etc.? These things depend not just on the quality of the material and the workmanship, but on the upkeep over the years...stone - or "stone" - is probably more forgiving than a grey panel whose whole aesthetic purpose is to be new and modern, a flat plane milled to perfection.
I could assume that Design Guild will be clad with the crappiest precast ever, stained and chipped to death before it ever gets installed, but why assume that it'll be worse or uglier right off the bat than, for instance, the grey bricks on the new opera house?
It's a simple truth that this building would look better in a row of equal or taller buildings, and not even just a row of duplicate Design Guilds. Buildings that are taller than both neighbours but have blank sides in anticipation of taller neighbours almost always look silly when alone, particularly if the current neighbours are small grey boxes and if the building replicates a style never intended to be built alone. Silly or not, this is a happy building, and a row of them would be happier still. A row of grey panels at eye level is almost never happy. The fact that developers always select "pre-fab Haussmann" out of the historic hodge-podge cabinet is annoying, though...why not try out some of those 17thC Amsterdam houses with the funky roof lines, dark brick, and bright trim? Is it because there's no place for concrete bollards and Juliet balconies, which developers think discriminating buyers must have if they are to own the ultimate in luxury?