TrickyRicky
Senior Member
You know I have been following this issue for a long time and even 10 years or so on this forum. When I was a younger man I was gung ho on demolition. I have since become agnostic. The reason I am agnostic now is that in the past the demolition was seen as a catalyst for development and urban renewal in the central waterfront. This argument has lost it's force because the development plan for the area in question is already set and under construction. The form and character of the area will be what it is regardless of what we do about the Gardiner. This form is not human in scale or character. It is characterized by long-blocks, tall buildings and sweeping road-ways and open spaces. This is not really a critic, I am not saying all parts of the city should be human scale or character, it's that a highway no longer feels incongruent with the set form of the area.