HHC
Active Member
Good to hear that ugly concrete monstrosity will be put down. As for the obstructed views, I'm not too keen on.
^^^
If you were to take a photo of Queen's Park from as close up as those photos, you wouldn't see the towers in the background.
As a side note, seeing those pictures makes me realize that we have the ugliest legislature in the country.
MLiPreti said:Where does context fit into all of this? How many of these legislative buildings have a dense major thoroughfare directly behind them? It's easy to compare the other provinces when their capitals have a completely different population than us. Victoria, Edmonton, Regina, Winnipeg, Quebec City, Fredericton, they're just simply not comparable and I think to pretend that they are is a little ridiculous. If our legislative building wasn't located essentially in the heart of the city with Bloor St as a backdrop I might be more willing to agree but considering its location I think we have to be realistic and not idealistic.
This building represents our greatest ideals as a culture.
This building represents our greatest ideals as a culture.
A big city should mean big planning power to create a beautiful city, not generic metropolis.
Sorry for the enormous picture, but this is kinda the point I am trying to make.
Picture this with generic glass condos behind it.. much worse. A lot less imposing.
I know Queen's Park isn't exactly the US Capitol Building, but it's the same sort of idea, complete with the corridor and vista.
And again, I bring up context. If the White House were located in the core of a city full of skyscrapers (which it obviously isn't for security reasons *which is a logical reason, which is my point*) then yes I would say the same thing.