whatever
Senior Member
There's lot of buildings with interior balconies. Village by the Grange, the Merchandise Building, and High Park Lofts all have balconies facing an interior courtyard, don't they?
No it wouldn't. People suck.Thernan: I would think that having hundreds of other balconies facing towards you would discourage any rowdy behavior. Also, if designed well, the positioning of the balconies could break up the movement of sound waves, like egg carton shaped foam in a recording studio.
So I've just noticed that the horizontal, silver banding on the window-wall is now every floor on the north side of the tower...
... But completely absent from the south elevation. That's an, er, interesting choice.
I noted that a dozen or so pages back. It's a dog's breakfast this building, and the curtain wall really is not helping. This is the city's tallest disaster in the making, and on so many levels. Canderel just shouldn't be allowed to build in the city anymore, I say pull the wool out from under their 460 Yonge project before another one of their cheap-ass eyesores go up.
i'll leave aside the fact that you seem to be misusing the word 'parody'. in other words, i wont ask the question: who am i a parody of?
anyway, it actually it only takes a few seconds to document the appallingly sloppy construction of this thing. its being banged together like a tree fort. essentially all you do is just point your camera anywhere and you find things that are wrong with it. you don't even have to look through the viewfinder.
but anyway, you are right on one point. i am quite happy to do anything i can to publicize the deficiencies of the vertical cow patties of Canderel/G+C. we can only hope that enough people in the city become enlightened enough to finally say: you know what? enough already with these badly built, badly designed, embarrassingly ugly clunkers. please, leave our city alone.
you underestimate how angry some of us are that a building of this appalling quality and size has been deposited like a gigantic cow patty in the heart of downtown. further, some of us are extremely annoyed at the fact that a developer feels they can justify putting up a 78 story monstrosity in downtown Toronto without employing a real architect. and don't tell me that Aura was subjected to “Toronto's first ever, international architectural peer review process†all you need to do is look at the photos of the retail spaces and the podium that have been posted to know that the city has been shamelessly duped.
and about two hundred pages back, i had waves of abuse hurled my way for predicting that this building was going turn out exactly as you've described it. you know, back in the days of:
You're missing the fact that it's really really really really tall!!! Ohboyohboyohboy!!!