Toronto Forma | 308m | 84s | Great Gulf | Gehry Partners

You are confusing me with someone else.

My concerns are 1) that this project is not built for the people who will live in it, or for the people who'll live around it, and 2) that it will set a precedent whereby ignoring every single rule in the book is acceptable when coming up with a proposal.

Density won't be a problem with this project. It will be however if it sets a precedent for surrounding lots. City planners did their best to ensure Festival Tower did not do this, but it did... and it's in that context that we must make a decision today.

Then perhaps it's the 'rules' which should be questioned, not the resulting buildings. Is the area any worse off because of Festival Tower or the subsequent projects it produced?
 
Toronto is a wonderful city. 6th livable city in the world and when I said "world class city" I meant the skyline of the city is boring and I never said to copy what Dubai or Hong Kong does. I said that more projects like mirvish Gehry, Oxford place and one yonge should be proposed, not only proposed but approved as well.

The skyline has nothing to do with being world class. I haven't seen one single ranking that considers the skyline. That being said, lets hope those projects you mention get build.
 
Would you replace "skyline" with "monumental architecture" and still make that statement? Monumental Architecture is no guarantee of greatness but it is a necessary precondition.
 
I used to be on the fence about this project, but now I'm turning against it. The buildings look great, but architecture - though it's our primary interest on this forum - is just one consideration.

I'm getting kind of sick of Mirvish's arrogance over this project. How he seems to think we should be grateful while he breaks a long list of heritage and zoning rules in order to make himself hundreds of millions of dollars richer by dumping almost 3000 new units on an already bloated condo market. If Mirvish wants to leave a legacy that the people of Toronto will appreciate, why not hire Gehry to build a City of Toronto Museum somewhere. I'm sorry if I'm not feeling pride over another condo developer trying to gorge themselves.

Meanwhile, I'm really not convinced by Christopher Hume (and others) clutching his pearls over the fact that Toronto's not going to be a "world class city" without this development. Can anyone really say or hear the term "world class city" without rolling their eyes?

I agree with some aspects of your statement, but it's not as though Mirvish is going into this risk free.
 
A small but growing segment of citizenry who started to express interest in architecture will drift away concluding Great Architecture is something you fly somewhere else to see. As many here intone endlessly Toronto is 'quality of life' safe, first rate police, smog isn't bad, restaurant scene is lively, multi-cultural suburbs. Its a great place, and we're able to enjoy it undisturbed since tourists have no interest in coming here. Its the 'great architecture does not make a great city' view.

Y'know...I'd invert that. Because if said citizenry puts all those interest-in-architecture eggs in the Great Architecture basket, IMO it actually betrays their airheaded incompetence in the guise of "enlightenment"--no different from the kinds of mouthbreathers who conclude that "Toronto hasn't got heritage, its old stuff ain't thousands of years old like the Acropolis". And when it comes to such mentalities, I'd actually fear the fate of so much "lesser" stuff out there--which is why, on balance, I'd have to conclude that the heritage movement of the 60s and 70s, in tandem with creeping Jane Jacobism, did more to engender a *healthy* interest in architecture and urban fabric--even in Toronto--than any modern-day starchitecture turn ever could.

So, in that spirit, rather than chasing/longing for Great Architecture in Toronto, it might be more disarmingly useful for them to develop a yen for the so-called humdrum and everyday and warts-and-all preexisting environments in places like London or Paris or NYC. Learn to appreciate them as Real Cities, rather than as dumb tourist bait....
 
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Is Alex Bozikovic's contention that this project will make hundreds of millions of dollars for David Mirvish going to be repeated on UrbanToronto without being challenged?

This project is going to cost a lot more to build than the average owing to it's ever-changing and expensive cladding, floorplates, finishings, etc. The architect is more expensive than most too, much more in fact. Then there are the features in the podiums that have to be paid for: one being given free of charge to OCAD U, the other being turned into a large art gallery. After however many tens of thousands extra it's going to cost per unit to build those features, you'd then have to add on another $40,000 per unit on average to clear $100,000,000.

We're seeing luxury units languish on the market in Toronto. Trump, Shangri-La, Aura, the Ritz Carlton, 77 Charles West, and many more buildings have lots of million dollar units sitting unsold. This is such a large project, it has to be priced right to work. Sure a good number of people will pay a premium to live in M+G, but the state of the market at the moment does not favour the difference being that big, and definitely not on smaller suites: investors won't buy what they can't cover from renters (and Festival Tower showed that renters aren't normally willing to pay a premium for OTT buidings).

It comes down to this: Mirvish should make many millions on this project if it's priced right, and nothing if it's priced too high. Claiming he will make hundreds of millions? Silly talk.

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As the project gets closer to the OMB, it sounds like tempers are starting to flair a little. In that vain, I have to say that these are only warehouses! their not maple leaf gardens, osgoode, massey hall etc.

The bell lightbox is only 3 yrs old & it has more heritage than the vast majority of what you call heritage.

I think Mies TD Centre is considered heritage? If not, then lets consider the warehouses as more important and just tear down TD. Saving heritage ( once again warehouses) at all costs is ridicules.

Btw, the globe article has it right, their will be some adjustments to the design but not the inclusion of these buildings. And this project is going to get done.
 
^You consider the lightbox great architecture? Oh gosh, we are in trouble....

People forget that many of us have centuries of history in this town, that our ancestors laid out, designed and built these buildings. We are attached to our history thank you.

I actually like this proposal but I do see the only interesting part of King Street being slowly destroyed in the name of progress. The treatment at grade of the M+G proposal is very '60s-70s-style, very MINT-ish and honestly, very dated. Block-busting with windswept plazas, huge parking entrances and setbacks is not the right approach.

Think of this area as being like the Distillery District: old warehouses surrounding windswept squares, parking lots and ugly newer buildings. These old warehouses, when sandblasted, restored and renewed could indeed be fantastic forward thinking urbanism.

Insert the towers above, I do not care how high, but it is on the street where it really matters.
 
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^You consider the lightbox great architecture? Oh gosh, we are in trouble....

Insert the towers above, I do not care how high, but it is on the street where it really matters.

The TIFF and the importance of it to the city is the heritage value, not the architecture.

And I can't see Gehry using those buildings, unless he puts them below street level.
 
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To touch on the 'novel' dimension of all of this, I find it peculiar that we always seem to be striving to get the Libeskinds, Gherys, Van der Rohes of the world rather then making them. While some may find it conservative to be cautious of this project because it limits 'great', 'world-class' architecture, one could say it is conservative to consider this project precisely that - great and world calss. The world of global architecture still very much appreciates the avant-garde. What Ghery has proposed for this block is over twenty-years old, or if you want to be more specific to building type almost ten. The ambitions that some have to be in the same league as some of the aformentioned cities in this thread are misplaced in attempting to emulate their look, whereas perhaps we ought be emulating their innovation and intent. This design, while yes it is novel and different from what we have in Toronto, on a global scale it is much more of a worn-off novelty.
 
And time again we see the mentioning of the TD Centre in this thread, which appears to is be regarded as a universally noted example of great architecture. Great new architecture, which was built at the expense of existing structures. Yet, in the world of architecture history, theory, and critique, we find the TD Centre to be largely absent. The reason lies in New York's Seagram building, which was the true manifestation of Miesian high-rise innovation. Perhaps I'm not being fair however, because there is an aspect of the TD Centre that seems to be greatly analyzed and globally lauded in such circles though is not the office towers but the 1-story banking pavillion. This sublime building is where the greatness of the TD Centre truly lies and interesngly enough it is the structure that has the least monolithinc, skyline-shaping, characteristics of the entire complex.
 
^ Don't assume a granular approach to the TD Centre; there's a reason why the banking pavilion is mentioned more often than a similar structure in Washington. Sure, individually, the TD towers might not be more important than the Seagram building, but as a whole, the TD Centre is (if not more so). I have yet to see a mention of Miesian architecture without a reference to Toronto, and yet many of his other buildings often go unmentioned. That, to me, further reaffirms the significance of M-G; scaled down, or inspected individually, the buildings might not be any greater than 8 Spruce, but as a whole, this will be Gehry's most iconic project, and if built, I don't think it would be possible for anyone to overlook it when mentioning Gehry's contributions.
 
As the project gets closer to the OMB, it sounds like tempers are starting to flair a little. In that vain, I have to say that these are only warehouses! their not maple leaf gardens, osgoode, massey hall etc.

The bell lightbox is only 3 yrs old & it has more heritage than the vast majority of what you call heritage.

I think Mies TD Centre is considered heritage? If not, then lets consider the warehouses as more important and just tear down TD. Saving heritage ( once again warehouses) at all costs is ridicules.

E.B., you sound exactly like the sort of person I referred to in this post a few days ago...

All these people hailing the newfangled stuff they're building in London, but who'd be absolutely STOOPID. STOOPID. STOOPID. STOOPID. STOOPID. at beholding anything in London, or New York, or wherever that's over 20 years old, unless it's some kind of Certified Tourist Landmark or Seagramesque *ooh*! *aah!* proto-starchitecture...

So, if you want to know why tempers are "flairing a little", that's why.
 
^ Adma, your assumptions are ridiculous and insulting. Are you suggesting that only those in favour of the old warehouses are capable of appreciating the "non-certified" heritage stock in London/NYC? Now, that is STOOPID!
 

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