AlvinofDiaspar
Moderator
One could predict it would be packed, right? Plus the students love the upper floors anyway. You think that with a prime location on Yonge, coupled with students spending long hours here, that there would be a greater desire to have decent retail spaces. Wouldn't that reduce the need for funding by having extra income? Correct me if I'm wrong, AoD.
The food court at 10 Dundas is filled with students and often used as a meeting place for studying, and that's several floors up! I really must be missing something here. Please explain how this is sufficient when it could have been extra-special and extra useful with extra income with just a few extra floors (taking out my proposed residence above)...
I think Ryerson missed something here in their calculations.
The food court at 10 Dundas has plenty of students because the theatres are used as lecture halls during the daytime, and that Digital Media Zone is right there in the office section of the building. Given the retail vacancies at said complex, I am not at all convinced that it is a particularly successful model for a public institution to take on, emulate and run that risk of building that much retail in the hopes of "extra income" that might not materialize. Correct me if I am wrong, but I don't think the students are the ones clamouring for multiple levels of retail space at SLC, and if the student aren't clamouring for that, and the economic case is wanting, why should the university have that as a priority when it has nothing to do with core mission?
As to their calculations, well, so far their calculations worked well enough to land a Snohetta building, and the Maple Leaf Gardens, etc. I'd say they are doing just fine.
AoD
Last edited: