jaborandi
Active Member
That's odd because Cuba doesn't ship sugar here.
He never specified how many years ago. Perhaps he was a cabin boy.
That's odd because Cuba doesn't ship sugar here.
He never specified how many years ago. Perhaps he was a cabin boy.
This is my understanding...
The Redpath Refinery is owned by American Sugar Refining Inc. (an American company, if it wasn't obvious, so they weren't allowed to do business with Cuba anyway). The US sugar market is heavily protected though the form of heavy tariffs on foreign imports and quotas. If there is a sugar shortage in the US and tariffs or quotas are relaxed, ASR has the ability to quickly import refined sugar into the USA through their strategically located refinery in Toronto.
Redpath's importance to its owner means that it's not likely to be going anywhere soon.
(Again, just my understanding of the situation.)
Sheesh... another condo.I don't know if this means anything, but there is an article on Torontoist called "Tomorrowland: Previewing Toronto’s Architecture of the Future", and it features a rendering of a series of buildings on the Redpath site. The article itself doesn't say anything about the site or the rendering. Any ideas of what this could be?
http://torontoist.com/2015/06/tomorrowland-previewing-torontos-architecture-of-the-future/
View attachment 47375
EDIT: It's part of a concept by WZMH Architects
https://twitter.com/WZMHarchitects
Ah, thanks. Still, why is every hypothetical Toronto of the future a Shanghai-like wall of glass condos?It's not anything - see http://urbantoronto.ca/forum/showth...-the-Future-Exhibit-at-Metro-Hall-June-1-to-5
AoD
Ah, thanks. Still, why is every hypothetical Toronto of the future a Shanghai-like wall of glass condos?
The rail along QQE into Redpath is removed, and several of the Gardiner East renders "disappeared" the Harbour Lead line into the east portlands too...Sheesh... another condo.
Can't we have any non-desk jobs on the waterfront? We have a working port with rail connections, do we really want to replace all that with more condos? http://www.portstoronto.com/Port/About-Us.aspx
This is my understanding...
The Redpath Refinery is owned by American Sugar Refining Inc. (an American company, if it wasn't obvious, so they weren't allowed to do business with Cuba anyway). The US sugar market is heavily protected though the form of heavy tariffs on foreign imports and quotas. If there is a sugar shortage in the US and tariffs or quotas are relaxed, ASR has the ability to quickly import refined sugar into the USA through their strategically located refinery in Toronto.
Redpath's importance to its owner means that it's not likely to be going anywhere soon.
(Again, just my understanding of the situation.)