jn_12
Senior Member
But there are many other areas where we "outdo" Chicago. Every city is going to have areas where it is better or worse than others. Chicago's strongest aspect might be its waterfront and it might have the best waterfront in the world. Those are extremely high standards to set in my opinion, and while Toronto is a great city, you're always going to set yourself up for failure if you're looking to compare us to Chicago in this area.I don't think we want Toronto's waterfront to be exactly like Chicago's, literally speaking. This is more about a comparable degree of quality and scale, whether talking about Millennium Park vs City Place or the Shed vs the proposed Ripley's aquarium, or waterfront development overall.
But I think some people are talking literally. They want to know why we don't have a huge expansive park on the waterfront (ignoring the islands of course). I agree with everything you say here, but I'm just saying that Chicago's waterfront developed this way because of a lot of unique circumstances. Even Toronto's 50 or so years of prosperity probably doesn't compare to the growth/wealth of Chicago in the late 1800s/early 1900s during an era where public goods/investment was perhaps at its peak.Again, nobody here is talking 'literally'... and I can't help but feel you are simply apologizing for the inferiority of Toronto over Chicago on these things. As many things as Chicago has or has had going for it so has Toronto. We have experienced enormous prosperity in this city over the last 50 or 60 years, and the early post-war generations of Toronto did build big, did build with quality and did not have excuses about why they couldn't build subways or gorgeous new modernist buildings or the world's tallest tower and so on. We've also had our share of private investment and philanthropy, including the recently completed museums in Toronto that you cite... and as far as the AGO goes I wouldn't consider it second to anything in terms of quality and integrity, though the Dundas Street/Grange Park surroundings are another matter altogether!
I agree to an extent because I think more can and should be done. But I think it would be interesting to know how many Chicagoans actually use their park. I know in my experiences in Chicago the park is primarily a tourist spot. Locals everywhere tend to avoid tourist spots. It's kind of like Queen Victoria Park in Niagara Falls, which was built as a space for locals to enjoy the Falls, yet no one from Niagara goes there. It's very hard (and I wrote part of my Masters thesis on this issue) to create a space that is friendly to both locals and tourists. I think our waterfront kind of does a good job of this by acting primarily as a neighbourhood. Personally, I'd say the waterfront is no more for Torontonians to enjoy as Little Italy or St Lawrence or any other part of the city. And besides, we have the Islands as well.... but the watefront should be an asset for all to enjoy, locals and visitors alike. It isn't just the backdrop of a neighbourhood, it is the front face of the city. In Toronto we are leaving very little parkland or open public space on the water, choosing to go for development instead. Pretty boardwalks and lamps? Yes, but not the kind of vision for the Waterfront that we hoped would correct the mistakes already made.
I agree with you here as well. There isn't a sense of overt civic pride in our city and that needs to change.I think you're missing the point. This is not a discussion of the waterfront per se, it is about the city's failure to provide for and maintain quality public spaces. We could just as easily be discussing Queen's Park or the fountains on University Avenue or hydro poles or any number of other issues. They are all part of the same problem. Why should we expect the waterfront to be any better, or any other space for that matter, if we do not address this problem and improve?
... and not to be a complete downer on Toronto either because there are some bright spots and there are some things we are doing well. Bloor Street is finally emerging as something worthy enough to be considered a high-end retail area. NPS is being restored to some of its former glory. Fort York may finally get a little of the attention it deserves... but these things are signposts that point to the direction we should be taking in Toronto. These things should be setting a standard, and hopefully they will!
Honestly, I think we're on the same page, but the point of my post above was that in the last day or two the conversation has had a tone of "why can't we have a waterfront like Chicago's?" and so I answered that question. If it's just a matter of bettercivic pride or design or better maintenance of our current infrastructure then that's fine and I'm on board (though I don't think the aquarium is the right launching point for such a discussion. I think it's fine for what it is/will be).