@rdaner Can I ask if you took the candle down, or did you find it there already? Either way, one of these excellent shots is Monday's Photo of the Day. Thanks!
Both should name parks after him.(when is Montreal or Toronto naming a park after him?)
On your first point, I would hope that the powers that be at The Well are figuring this out now, and talking with the City about it. All of The Well's streetscaping is CCxA, and that includes The Cats Parkette that ties to project to Draper Street, and I believe the City is going ahead with the CCxA plan for the park that will tie The Well to KING Toronto across Wellington to the north. It's that last one that I hope comes together with Marc Hallé and his colleagues completing the firm's plan there, and as it will be a City Park, they can name it in Cormier's honour. If not that, then maybe The Cats Parkette, though that seems a little too to-the-side. Or, with just a little maudlin feeling rising in me, a grander gesture by renaming Love Park as Claude Cormier Love Park.There must be a way for the City to properly honour him through a specific naming and/or project.
But there would be no better tribute than for all us here, and (and in other communities he has touched) to insist on reaching higher and trying for more in landscape architecture, in parks, in public realm/streetscape and every other thing we care about.
Good enough is NOT good enough.
But don't just complain, advocate for better and make the case stick!
That one's in the front page story too!!I want to bring a photo of Berczy forward to the thread. This wont' be one of mine, but a favourite of mine by @Jeff Morgan from June, 2021:
View attachment 506707
Or, with just a maudlin feeling rising in me, a grander gesture by renaming Love Park as Claude Cormier Love Park.
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Love Park is such a generic name anyway. There's one in Philadelphia and another one (albeit in Spanish) in Lima, Peru. Claude Cormier Park or Claude Cormier Love Park would be a fitting tribute to him and a constant reminder to landscape architects, urban planners and our municipal leaders to always challenge the status quo and create public places we can all enjoy and be proud of.Both should name parks after him.
On your first point, I would hope that the powers that be at The Well are figuring this out now, and talking with the City about it. All of The Well's streetscaping is CCxA, and that includes The Cats Parkette that ties to project to Draper Street, and I believe the City is going ahead with the CCxA plan for the park that will tie The Well to KING Toronto across Wellington to the north. It's that last one that I hope comes together with Marc Hallé and his colleagues completing the firm's plan there, and as it will be a City Park, they can name it in Cormier's honour. If not that, then maybe The Cats Parkette, though that seems a little too to-the-side. Or, with just a maudlin feeling rising in me, a grander gesture by renaming Love Park as Claude Cormier Love Park.
To your second point, yes!
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