We have a story up on the front page highlighting a pile of new renderings on this project, and you can dig deep into all of that in a huge update to the WPP dataBase entry!
If we knocked down the Gardiner we would still have the ugly rail corridor anyways, so there's no point.
+1It's funny I've always thought that too. Everyone hates the Gardiner, but honestly if you walk south on any street to the lake the bigger psychological and physical barrier is the long dark tunnels under the rail tracks. Not the short jaunt under the Gardinder. I'm not anti rail and I'm not proposing ripping up tracks, I just think it's funny that everyone harps on the Gardiner when the bigger barrier is definitely the rail corridor
The 30-storey 930,000-square foot building, designed by WZMH Architects, will be the new headquarters for the Canadian operations of the Royal Bank of Canada, and 330,000 square feet are available on floors 18 through 29. It will sit on the north side of Queens Quay, and connect to the existing two towers of WaterPark Place on Bay Street. Its address, however, is 85 Harbour Street, as that street runs along its north edge.
So the Royal Bank Plaza will be the headquarters on the international operations of the RBC the?
It's funny I've always thought that too. Everyone hates the Gardiner, but honestly if you walk south on any street to the lake the bigger psychological and physical barrier is the long dark tunnels under the rail tracks. Not the short jaunt under the Gardinder. I'm not anti rail and I'm not proposing ripping up tracks, I just think it's funny that everyone harps on the Gardiner when the bigger barrier is definitely the rail corridor
When crossing the Gardiner, you enter this darkened machine space with a huge amount of cars travelling in every direction and obnoxious noise coming from different directions. The space is dominated by cars, and a person must have a heightened sense of awareness similar to the experience of a driver somewhere where pedestrians dominate. (Except of course, the pedestrians' physical safety is at stake.) If there weren't ramps and the traffic of Lake Shore and a person could just walk under it without any cars, it wouldn't be much of a barrier. Then again, psychological barriers may vary.
Now they just need to improve the terrible access to the south PATH at the Air Canada Centre.
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Based on the ones I walk regularly - Cherry, Sherbourne, and Jarvis - I'd disagree with you. Feels much more of a barrier. So does Lakeshore Boulevard itself, which can take 2 pedestrian signals to cross in places. Amazingly, I noticed at the northwest corner of Sherbourne and Lakeshore the other day, that they didn't even have a wheelchair cut in the sidewalk!I disagree about the rail viaduct being more of a barrier. The underpasses are generally well lit, and you just walk through them like on any ordinary sidewalk.