Hipster Duck
Senior Member
In terms of their impact on neighbourhood life, vitality, etc.
I was thinking about how one of the biggest impediments to Toronto's downtown vitality is, ironically, one of the biggest assets to Toronto's economy and downtown job growth: the giant "Discovery District" of hospitals and healthcare research facilities. Let's face it: the area bounded by Edward, College, Bay and McCaul is an urban write-off. Hospitals are monumental in size and put up rather blank facades; good architecture is almost never demanded. Despite the thousands of workers in these places, they seemingly can't support the retail and services of the financial district so even with all that employment the surrounding streets feel deserted at the best of times. Other cities have hospitals in their downtowns, but shove them away to a corner: Montreal's hospitals and healthcare facilities all seem to hug the mountain; New York's are along the Hudson river on the edge of Manhattan; Vancouver puts it all in the VGH campus south of Broadway. Toronto is unfortunate in that the more exciting office and shopping areas of downtown grew around the hospital district, such that, were it not for Yonge street, Yorkville would be severed from the rest of downton by a square kilometer of institutional dullness.
Well, the hospitals aren't going anywhere, and they actually were there first when Yorkville was just another sleepy residential neighbourhood. Still, what can we do to enliven the hospital area? It kind of just sits there like a tumour.
I was thinking about how one of the biggest impediments to Toronto's downtown vitality is, ironically, one of the biggest assets to Toronto's economy and downtown job growth: the giant "Discovery District" of hospitals and healthcare research facilities. Let's face it: the area bounded by Edward, College, Bay and McCaul is an urban write-off. Hospitals are monumental in size and put up rather blank facades; good architecture is almost never demanded. Despite the thousands of workers in these places, they seemingly can't support the retail and services of the financial district so even with all that employment the surrounding streets feel deserted at the best of times. Other cities have hospitals in their downtowns, but shove them away to a corner: Montreal's hospitals and healthcare facilities all seem to hug the mountain; New York's are along the Hudson river on the edge of Manhattan; Vancouver puts it all in the VGH campus south of Broadway. Toronto is unfortunate in that the more exciting office and shopping areas of downtown grew around the hospital district, such that, were it not for Yonge street, Yorkville would be severed from the rest of downton by a square kilometer of institutional dullness.
Well, the hospitals aren't going anywhere, and they actually were there first when Yorkville was just another sleepy residential neighbourhood. Still, what can we do to enliven the hospital area? It kind of just sits there like a tumour.