Bad Bear
Active Member
Well, at least we got the greenery
Then turn either right or left and look at the green. A slightly broader perspective could do you a world of good.The only colour I see here is the stop sign. Seriously.
Then turn either right or left and look at the green. A slightly broader perspective could do you a world of good.
Yes, architectural designs, like all fashions, come and go but that doesn't mean variety can't be part of those styles. St.James is a product of it's time as was Regent Park but if those styles come back does that mean you want another one?
It's pretty depressing and the time to talk is now before the development is done and the developers pack their bags and leave a sea of monotony and broken dreams in their wake. Someone should be contacting the media {like that Toronto Star urban affairs guy} to get the attention this deserves before the area is completed and Toronto's Waterfront goes down as one of the biggest wasted opportunities in the city's history. By doing this it will also make it clear that the citizens will not tolerate this in any of the forthcoming developments in the future like The Portlands.
I'm hardly a fan of the seemingly monochrome manner in which this district is developing but I think the claim that the colour scheme alone is enough to make this "one of the biggest wasted opportunities in the city's history", and worthy of vitriolic backlash against the developer, is hugely overblown. There are dozens of (far more important) factors that go into determining whether or not a neighbourhood is successful and vibrant, and we aren't even close to being able to judge the vast majority of them when it comes to this district.