Adding my comments late to the discussion - I think there's a value to a bossy building taking up a lot of space. New York has them, and they can be thrilling in their monstrosity. And brutalism thrives in monotonous repetition. What I'm more disappointed in is the messy and fussy way that Wallman has tried to soften its monstrosity. It's trying to give the feeling of multiple buildings but in the end, it feels like a neighbourhood's facades have been pasted onto a heaving - yes, chonk - of a building.
The building is not quite G+C level, but it's close. It's clear that the design was finessed for the developer (look at all of these lake-viewing terraces!) rather than for the community.
At one point, Wallman looked like it would be a worthy offshoot of AA, but they have not lived up to the promise.