Automation Gallery
Superstar
At a 4% vacancy rate and lowest in North America, i think soDoes the Toronto office market have the capacity to readily absorb this all this new proposed office space,
At a 4% vacancy rate and lowest in North America, i think soDoes the Toronto office market have the capacity to readily absorb this all this new proposed office space,
I’m afraid this is going right over my head...It can be, but it isn't here.
42
Except the dimension that really mattered in this particular example is that it is a tower by Renzo Piano - that alone would have made it more desirable.
AoD
Even if they added 6 floors to make it 70 storeys, that would make this beast around 325 meters to tip. Still, pretty impressive for a purely office tower outside of NYC and China even at 298, in this day and age.
For what it's worth, I'd not like to see a Shard II in Toronto. It would be a little "me too" for my liking.
Ugh?, new office space being built downtown, thats progress for the city, whats there not to celebrateand the addition of yet more office space, what exactly is worth celebrating here?
I'm finding it difficult to get excited about this to even the slightest degree. The design (at least in its current iteration) is, to me, lazy, uninspired, and unrefined, to say nothing of the fact that I had previously assumed HPA would be above plopping a superfluous and non-contextual spire atop one of its buildings. And at grade, the development's only redeeming quality is at best a cheap facsimile of the Hudson Yards shed.
I get that some folks get excited about height for height's sake, but other than the continued densification of the city (which I almost always take as a positive) and the addition of yet more office space, what exactly is worth celebrating here?
Ugh?, new office space being built downtown, thats progress for the city, whats there not to celebrate
Yay, "new office space for the city"! Can't wait to tell all my friends!
When assessing this design, please do so in the following context:
- A+ location
- A+ money behind the development
- A+ rents to be charged
- A+ attention and buzz
Recognize that the factors at play are optimal for something world-class, so logically, this will be the best we can get in Toronto. Our ceiling is a tall-ish box who appears to have eaten too many Lindt truffles over the holidays and is now unable to zip up the dress she just bought at Winners.
Why is no one concerned about:
1. pulling down CCS and CC East? These are far from the worst piles in the city.
2. adding a building the size of First Canadian Place and the transit implications. Once, someone told me that 16,500 people worked in First Canadian Place. How Re this many more people going to get to work pre Relief Line?
3. the tightness of the ‘fit’ of something so massive directly north of and so close to Brookfield Place?
I'm finding it difficult to get excited about this to even the slightest degree. The design (at least in its current iteration) is, to me, lazy, uninspired, and unrefined, to say nothing of the fact that I had previously assumed HPA would be above plopping a superfluous and non-contextual spire atop one of its buildings. And at grade, the development's only redeeming quality is at best a cheap facsimile of the Hudson Yards shed.
I get that some folks get excited about height for height's sake, but other than the continued densification of the city (which I almost always take as a positive) and the addition of yet more office space, what exactly is worth celebrating here?
^ hilarious.
I won't miss the street killing wellington cc south. Nice architecture but helped kill a nearly dead street.
I will call David P (who is very tired no doubt) and tell him to fix the tower and streetscape ... lol. No worries. Happy New Year.