innsertnamehere
Superstar
heck, the only not so nice circular building I can think of in this city is parade.
Ideally, two towers along Wellesley St. (hopefully with some retail) and then a small parkette along the Breadalbane side.
^The Met buildings on Carlton are quite nice too. Love looking at them when I walk past.
City Hall? Panorama?
Doesn't this count for anything?
What a shame that the Province didn't play ball. I love downtown intensification, but a large, totally unspoiled piece of land in the middle of downtown is an opportunity we can't really ever get back. That said, I think the possibilities here were somewhat limited by the lack of frontage of the parcel to major streets.
Fortunately Queen's PARK is a mere one block west.
That's the restored facade of the University theatre (note that the original door handles into Pottery Barn are even original) that closed in fall of '86, auditorium demolished in '87 or '88.
After the auditorium was demolished in '87 or '88 it sat like this for the better part of a decade:
^It looked better then. That condo was a mistake.
i dont know. I have yet to see a curved building in this town that was any good.
Fortunately Queen's PARK is a mere one block west.
City TO can ill afford to squander $65 million land cost + development charges, + Section 37 benefits + Property Tax Revenue + a $300 million condo project.
Again, I wasn't really thinking about a park here, but that's the only kind of public space that people seem to be able to compute in Toronto, so whatever.
But I will argue anyway, and hammer this point home, again and again because it cannot be said enough.
There much more to life than the almighty dollar. This is about building a better city with a vision of what downtown will look like 100 years from now.
The city can ill afford a loss of a piece of civic city building (you know, actual urban planning) that involves building a park on the only large piece of empty land in downtown Toronto in a neighbourhood that has added immense density. And it will only become more dense.