zurich: What's up with it?

hbarradar3 weeks agoOthers34

Zurich: Where the Rich Play and the Rest of Us Just Pay

So, Zurich's at it again. Another shiny bauble for the elite, while the rest of us are stuck navigating the soul-crushing commute. This time it's a fancy office building by Santiago Calatrava, the guy who apparently never met an angle he didn't like. Haus zum Falken, they're calling it. Sounds like a villain's lair in a Bond movie, doesn't it? Santiago Calatrava adds angular glass office building to Zurich station

Eight stories of steel and glass, plopped down next to the Stadelhofen station. Calatrava says it's an "artistic event." I say it's another monument to income inequality. But hey, at least there's a bicycle parking facility underneath. For 800 bikes. Because nothing says "accessible" like a building that caters to the kind of people who can afford $8,000 e-bikes.

"The glass facade forms a meandering composition..." Oh, give me a break. It's a building. A pretty building, sure, but still just a place for people to crunch numbers and plot world domination. All that talk of "dialogue between the grounded plinth and the glass body above" just sounds like architect-speak for "I needed to justify my exorbitant fees somehow."

And don't even get me started on the "skylit, four-story atrium where the sculptural stairwell serves as a dynamic centerpiece." Dynamic centerpiece? It's stairs. You walk up them. What's so dynamic about that?

Speaking of infrastructure, did you see that aerial photo of the Zurich Airport runway system? One of Europe’s most complex feats of design, apparently. More like one of Europe's most anxiety-inducing nightmares for air traffic controllers. All those intersecting runways... It's a wonder planes don't just start playing chicken up there.

"Add in noise abatement procedures and political constraints, and you get one of Europe’s most intricate and fascinating airfields to manage.” Fascinating for whom? The engineers who designed it? The politicians who signed off on it? Definitely not the poor saps stuck in a holding pattern, circling for hours while they miss their connecting flights. Offcourse, the rich probably don't fly commercial anyway.

zurich: What's up with it?

But here's the kicker: while Zurich's busy building architectural marvels and designing runway mazes, a Swiss bank gets hacked. Habib Bank AG Zurich, to be exact. Some Russian ransomware gang called Qilin claims they stole 2.5 terabytes of data. Passport numbers, account balances, transaction notifications... the whole shebang.

And what's the bank doing? Radio silence, apparently. Cybernews reached out for clarification, but haven't heard back. Real reassuring, isn't it? Meanwhile, Qilin is out there flexing, posting screenshots of the stolen data on their dark net blog. Nice.

So, let me get this straight. We've got fancy buildings, complex runways, and banks getting robbed blind. And the solution is... more fancy buildings? More complex designs? Maybe, just maybe, Zurich should focus on the basics for a hot minute. Like, I don't know, protecting people's data.

Then again, maybe I'm the crazy one here. Maybe all this shiny stuff is worth it, even if it comes at the expense of security and accessibility. Maybe we should all just shut up and admire the "meandering composition" of the glass facade.

Oh, and Kevin Magnussen, the former F1 driver? He's resurfaced in Zurich as an investor in a motorsport simulator company. Because apparently, real racing is too expensive for the poors. So, they get to pretend they're racing, while the rich get to actually race. How very... Zurich. He's also invested in a French football club with Novak Djokovic and Felipe Massa. Because why not?

Zurich's Got Its Priorities Backwards

Tags: zurich

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