Considering that this thread is about the comparative number of highrises UNDER CONSTRUCTION at the current time, a lot of these criticisms completely miss the point. No one doubts that there are far more highrises in Hong Kong than in Toronto (or even than in New York). But that is not what is being compared, instead it's the number of highrises under construction over 100m (and 150m, 200m, 250m, ,,,) and I am sure that those numbers are a lot more complete than the shorter buildings would be, even for Asian cities. Are there any 250m buildings under construction in Shenzhen that SSP is unaware of? Possibly, but I doubt it.
You do know Shanghai is construcing a 600M+ building, right? well, that's taller than if you put FCP on top of Scotia Plaza, or you put Trump Toronto, Shangrila Toronto as well as the Ritz Carlton on top of each other.
Both Shanghai and Shenzhen are fast growing cities growing at 10% per year (Toronto, maybe 2% at best?), and each year tens of thousands of new migrant workers move to these new cities for opportunities, and you are naive to believe there are more buildings under construction than these cties 10 or 8 times Toronto's size?
Honestly, folks, quit keep talking about "
north America" and feel so good about Toronto's vibant downtown and growth. Visit a real big city in Asia, and you will immediately feel how small Toronto actually is! Toronto's "pedestrians", and condos boom are really nothing impressive in comparison, for real. Shanghai and Shenzhen's department stores and markets are open till 11pm or midnight mostly, people shop and dine out at 10 or 11pm. Their bars and nightclubs open until 4am; and it is not only in downtown. Cities like Shanghai doesnt have one downtown, it has 6 or 7 downtowns in different corners of the city, with 24 hour pedestrian traffic. Street foods are practically everywhere. Almost all streets are mixed used with plenty of retail/dining/entertainment. Yonge/Queen West/Bloor are nothing compared with Huaihai Road and Nanjing Road when it comes to how busy and vibrant the streets are. The financial district is very tiny and not tall at all compared with Lujiazui's real super talls. People's square is like 10 times the size of Dundas Square with 10+ department stores, 4 or 5 theatres, art galleris, restaurants etc, a big park and three subway lines.
That being said, Toronto is not a bad city. It does stand out among "North America"s handful of real big cities in terms of street life and energy. However, don't stretch it. Don't imagine it leads the
world in anything. For someone from Shanghai, Shenzhen or Tokyo, Toronto is really a mid-sized city with some OK energy, but really not comparable to their cities even by a long shot. Most Asians settle in Toronto because it is a smaller city than they used to live in, and life here is quieter, not because it is a big city.