toto
Active Member
what do you think of winnipeg now compared to toronto, some similarities at the least.
There are 100 buildings in Toronto taller than Winnipeg's tallest. No comparison.
what do you think of winnipeg now compared to toronto, some similarities at the least.
I don't think he was sloppy...I think he has some credibility on the subject as he has published at a rate of almost five articles per year since 1992 in leading peer-reviewed academic economics journals, in addition to many other books, articles, blogs, and op-eds. He's made substantial contributions to the empirical study of urban economics. In particular, his work examining the historical evolution of economic hubs like Boston and New York City has had major influence on both economics and urban geography.
Come on, Winnipeg is a dump with a 1/2 dozen out dated hi-rises.
PS: I think it would be a fitting tribute to Jane, if Toronto ever built an urban pedestrian mall, if it was named after her. For someone who valued pedestrians and street life as much as her, I would think that would be fitting.
Winnipeg's historic core is more impressive than Toronto's. If I were to take a visitor without any knowledge of Canadian history around both downtowns and make a claim that Winnipeg was a bigger, more important city than Toronto in 1910 (it was not), they would probably believe me.
Surely you can't be serious. Take a picture from the front steps of the Manitoba Legislature and one from Ontario Legislature and ask someone which is the bigger city. Not to mention most of historic downtown is marred by a series of connecting glass tubes giving the city a hamster cage feel.
Historic. The operative word is 'historic'; as in, Winnipeg has a more impressive collection of heritage buildings than Toronto. Some of it is, of course, due to the fact that Toronto demolished a good chunk of its historic core.
That's not to say that Winnipeg feels bigger at the current time than Toronto. Of course not. My original post was a response to Automation Gallery's ignorant comment about how downtown Winnipeg is just a collection of crappy skyscrapers.
If downtown Toronto had the energy that it currently has, but have buildings more representative of Winnipeg's exchange district, or Old Montreal, it would undoubtedly be a more impressive city.