why is the station a historic site?
Never knew that--what's so special about it?
I do wish toronto developers would get together and decide on an "aesthetic look" for a neighbourhood. Much like the developers in the suburbs build the same repetitive crap everywhere in a given subdivision--red brick or fake stone for example--new urbanisn or big garage in front look--downtown developers working with the city should decide that street A (or grid A) gets the mostly glass Clewesian look while street/grid B (hopefully in North York lol) gets the precast and faux chateau look.
That's what i'm puzzled about most: when did developers in Toronto lose touch with a common neighbourhood aesthetic? Look at a Victorian neighbourhood or a 1940's neighbourhood: similar scale, brick colour, building form. Something happened--during the 1960s? I think it really happened about 1995. (1960's are slabs mostly--obviously didn't fit in but all had a similar "look.") Starting about 1995, developers seem to have lost the idea that they build a neighbourhood, becoming selfish slaves to market research. Ugh.
Maybe we should start a thread about this topic: The Toronto Aesthetic throughout the past century and into the next.
My point: 22 wellesley looks great but I'm afraid the next towers to go up along that street won't be of a similar scale, architectural quality and look.