Benito
Senior Member
The cluster in that photo above has a nice variety of finishes. It isn't all glass towers. Once The One is built, it will have yet another tone added to up the variety even more. Yonge and Bloor is looking good.
The cluster in that photo above has a nice variety of finishes. It isn't all glass towers. Once The One is built, it will have yet another tone added to up the variety even more. Yonge and Bloor is looking good.
I totally disagree, the non-glass buildings in that cluster are totally distasteful with no architectural merits. These are not Ottawa or Chicago type non-glass high rises here.
Toronto really lacks behind in overall architectural appeal among other World class cities.
While we cannot catch up with the non-glass buildings (no chance), I wish the City could do more to demand much higher standard design for the Glass ones.
Where was that photo taken from?...one can see those balcony curves from an airplane, through a filmy airplane window, without a zoom lens on an airplane. Did I say it was from a plane?
I really wish that recladding wasn't so popular now, Sulton Place is a big loss to an interesting design from a different time, and the new reclad for the Residences of University has been a crazy contrast from its brutalist 60s origin to a fresh, plain 2000s glass surface. Hoping that we'll see less recladding going on, and something like the proposed reclad/redevelopment of the Y&E centre won't happen. Why concrete is a lot less liked now I'm not sure, itToronto has far better skyscrapers than Ottawa. You must have been thinking of a different city. What Ottawa "non-glass" high-rise is better than Scotia Plaza or Commerce Court North, for instance?
The photo you mention above has One St. Thomas, a well proportioned and tastefully detailed Art Deco revival tower that has proven quite popular with affluent buyers.
The Manulife Centre is also a great non-glass skyscraper visible in the photo--a rigid yet carefully designed concrete facade that conveys strength and stability. It's a local icon from the 1960s. I hope it never falls victim to the current wave of uninspired recladding projects that replace distinctive concrete facades from the 1960s and 1970s with generic glass.
I totally disagree, the non-glass buildings in that cluster are totally distasteful with no architectural merits. These are not Ottawa or Chicago type non-glass high rises here.
Toronto really lacks behind in overall architectural appeal among other World class cities.
While we cannot catch up with the non-glass buildings (no chance), I wish the City could do more to demand much higher standard design for the Glass ones.