verticalvillage
Active Member
I'm kinda confused, what properties besides Strolley's are part of this project?
I don't think we know the exact properties yet but $300M was reportedly spent. The only ones I've seen confirmed are Stollery's and the former FCUK store which is also owned by Stollery's.
The building housing Hue's Kitchen, 774 Yonge Street, has been sold as well.
The arched stone facade at 764 Yonge and the fine Victorian block at 776 are worth keeping.
Whether all the buildings are worth razing or not is dependent on what they are proposing to replace them with. Hard to make a judgement call without knowing what we're getting in return.
AoD
You've got to love Urban Toronto. Here we have the possibility of a very tall, iconic building that might very well be even better than One Bloor East across the street, and people are already whining about how they would prefer smaller, less ambitious projects at the corner of Bloor and Yonge.
The building housing Hue's Kitchen, 774 Yonge Street, has been sold as well.
Whether all the buildings are worth razing or not is dependent on what they are proposing to replace them with. Hard to make a judgement call without knowing what we're getting in return.
AoD
If we're just gonna get a plain wall of glass in return, then I'd much prefer the existing buildings. At least the facades have some variety.
I know it's early, but I would like if they could retain the worthwhile facades (764, 774, and the Burgundy's building) and consolidate them one beside the other somewhere on the site. It would help to maintain some of the finer grain "feel" of Yonge, while allowing Foster a large enough space to create something new and memorable.