Logan
Active Member
Really? Wow. It's nearly 2015 and we're still trying to figure this out. Meanwhile, a city like Vancouver has a had a permanent design review panel since 1998.
Hong Kong is the financial centre of the Eastern world and it's filled with far worse buildings. There's plenty of crap buildings to be found in cities around the world, there's nothing special about Toronto in this respect.
Somebody please post a link to a recently built set of towers, +60 floors or more, located in a postcard location of a major western city, as aesthetically underwhelming and architecturally undistinguished (designed by a 3rd rate local firm) as these brutally banal boxes.
These twins are going up next to the Skydome and CN Tower and will be among the most visible high-rises in the city. Bad architecture has a dispiriting effect on a city's self image and for a project of this size and prominence extra measures need to be taken to compel a positive result.
Yes, many Asian cities throw up reams of garbage--but is that what we're aspiring to be? Hong Kong has more skyscrapers than any city on Earth so of course they're going to have lots of clunkers. The city also has, arguably, the world's most impressive skyline and it would take dozens of sub-par 80 story towers to have any appreciably negative effect on it.
The cities that we typically envy and try to compete with--New York, London, Chicago, Sydney, SF--hell even Boston and Vancouver--do not desecrate their skylines with cheap, 3rd rate rubbish. A skyline is a city's--yes--"signature" (cue the irony!) it's logo and brand, and as such it has inherent and long lasting value. It shouldn't be cheapened by bean counting, carpet bagging developers like Concord. TPTB need to be able to step in and say "nope, this might be good for your bottom line, but not for our common interest."
If this project goes forward with no changes it may prove to be the final insult that provokes a more engaged response to architecture and design among the general citizenry. Having to stare up these uglies everyday from the Gardiner will have that effect. But common sense, and maybe a dash of anger, should kick in well before that.
I thought we'd learned from the Harbourfront debacle in the eighties the long term negative effects of building on the cheap, in prominent areas, and with no oversight. And for those bleating "Because capitalism!" or "they're doing it in Asia", you're not winning any economic arguments with those sorry excuses. A city needs stronger guiding principles than the free market can provide if it wants to succeed in the long run.
Why does MLS get so much criticism these days? When it was built, most people loved it. They loved the new public space, the mix of uses, the metropolitan scale and sleek modern design of the podium, as well as the thin glass towers. The only bad thing about it is the green glass.
Miami has a lot of garbage - http://www.picassodreams.com/photos/freedom/miami-skyline-blog.jpg
Totally disagree. The fault lies entirely with the city. Doesn't matter where a developer is headquartered. When Concord Pacific was being proposed in Vancouver, the city demanded Concord build all the parks, the seawall, the community centre BEFORE one single resident moved in. No exception. Our problem is that the city doesn't have the balls to do the same with our local developers.
Besides, aren't these buildings designed by Toronto architects (Page+Steele)? Maybe the question about aesthetics should be posed to them instead.
Miami has a lot of garbage - http://www.picassodreams.com/photos/freedom/miami-skyline-blog.jpg