E
Ed007Toronto
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www.omnitecturalforum.com...csave.html
A save the Concourse Building article. Very informative. Two things that stood out.
We really go overboard when we think only since the 60's and 70's have we not cared about the past or that we have too many parking lots. This is not a new situation at all per the above quote.
Our dear Mayor voted to allow them to demolish the building.
A save the Concourse Building article. Very informative. Two things that stood out.
Property Taxes - a historical reminder
The recent controversy over the survival of real estate "Class B" buildings such as The Concourse is not the first time our society has grappled with the issue of a new generation of offices displacing those of an earlier generation. The Concourse itself was once on the cutting-edge of office design and its appearance contributed to the loss of Edwardian buildings. Articles appeared in the press on twelve such buildings that had been demolished in 1935 alone. Consider the following account.
******** Under the current regime ... taxation has reached such dizzy peaks that the owners are tearing down their buildings rather than pay the taxes. They find it cheaper to run a parking lot....It is bad for everybody. ... In the heart of the city twelve buildings have been torn down. ... These buildings once housed hundreds of tenants and in some cases thousands of employees of different business concerns have totally disappeared. In the case of the Arlington Hotel the site has been converted into a weed lot ... (Others include) 18 King Street West where the former tenant was the Toronto Daily Star. The Evening Telegram, Toronto, December 27, 1935
We really go overboard when we think only since the 60's and 70's have we not cared about the past or that we have too many parking lots. This is not a new situation at all per the above quote.
Toronto City Council has voted to demolish the Concourse Building. If Council refuses to acknowledge the fundamental legal protection of 'designation' then there exists no means to preserve any built heritage.*
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Results of vote to allow demolition (the 'Concourse clause' TCC 8 (24), May 10 2000):*
"NO": ADAMS, AUGIMERI, BOSSONS, BUSSIN, FILION, LAYTON, MCCONNELL, MIHEVC, NUNZIATA, PITFIELD, PRUE, WALKER.*
"YES": Altobello, Ashton, Berardinetti, Berger, Brown, Chong, Chow, Davis, Disero, Duguid, Feldman, Gardner, Giansante, Holyday, Johnston, Jones, Kinahan, King, Korwin-Kuczynski, Lastman, Li Preti, Lindsay Luby, Mahood, Mammoliti, Miller, Moeser, Moscoe, O'Brien, Ootes, Palacio, Pantalone, Rae, Saundercook, Shiner, Sinclair, Silva, Soknacki, Tzekas.
Our dear Mayor voted to allow them to demolish the building.