I love all the contemporary details on the new building, but it looks very busy with the dense amount of those vertical lines and the completely different sections of all-glass cladding. (Are the vertical lines windows or just ornamental panels?). In the end, it might be great when it all comes together. By comparison, the old Riverdale Hospital is more restrained, but still finely detailed. It's more elegant, and it's worth seeing while you still can, especially since it hasn't closed yet and is in relatively good condition. There has to be a way to reuse it. We can think that the city is building a great collection of architecture and generating an excellent built heritage, but if we build beautiful buildings and then tear them down within a few decades, we're just spinning our wheels and going nowhere in this regard.