egotrippin
Senior Member
Me! Except I'd hire aA to do the job.
Wait a minute, not, y'know, S+P? The ones you mentioned yesterday?
Me! Except I'd hire aA to do the job.
Me! Except I'd hire aA to do the job.
ok... we all know that you pleasure yourself to a photo of Peter Clewes beside your desk!
not sure why you are replying to me? but regardless of pesonal tastes, there are empty lots nearby that should be developed before tearing down a working building. And then to wedge it right up beside Casa... I just dont get it. luckily I dont live there.
Me! Except I'd hire aA to do the job.
but regardless of pesonal tastes, there are empty lots nearby that should be developed before tearing down a working building.
Yeah, I find it hard to get excited about that DuBois Building. It's OK to admit that not everything architects experimented with in the past worked well... and a lot of brutalism just doesn't work, especially in an urban environment. The scale, the disregard for surroundings, the disregard for the street level... these are all anti-urban ideals. And, man, the grey! Toronto is grey enough already, especially in the winter. No need to promote Seasonal Affective Disorder with added dreary greyness.
I'm with Prince Chuck on this one. Much of England's modern architecture has a soul-crushing quality to it. Dreary, depressing, downright suicide-inducing. The odd interesting concrete brutalist building/monument is fine, but please, keep it in low doses...
The DuBois building is atrocious. I'd simply say I don't like it, but the fact adma's been yammering on and on about it, compels me to be a little more direct with my chosen adjective. It's a poorly designed, even more poorly executed pile of bland, concrete crap. I think it's cute, adma, that you have your little Concrete Toronto book and you're waving it around like some buffoon with a sickening superiority complex (ever thought about getting that checked out? Maybe some therapy?). You really are something to behold.