There's a sense of humanity that was at the very beginning of Prentice and stays with
it.
That this relationship, if you've ever been in these rooms and you lie in these rooms
and you look out and you see the nurse, you see the activity of the day, you see the doctors
coming and going, you make eye contact, you can start to see the cycle by which the meds
are delivered or the food is delivered.
These things are not surprises that pop in and out of your door.
We all know the chaos of these long hallways when you have no idea what's really happening
and you can't get a good night's sleep, you have no cycle.
These are the things that they were trying to address.
You walk into this room at your own risk because it leads to the future.
There's a future that will be but one that might be.
The demolition would occur as soon as possible, obviously you don't want to have an empty building
sitting there and we would move forward to take that down and then at some point in the
future, again no established date, at some point in the future a new building would
be constructed on the site.
You can make an argument for every building in the world that it should come down.
There is no building that is so functionally sacred that it cannot be touched.
So a function alone is the only argument you wish to use on buildings.
You can take any building down.
So what happens when a building outlifts its usefulness?
We obviously tear it down.
Do you do this with people?
