Toronto Dragon Condos | 37.49m | 10s | Ideal Developments | IBI Group

And it's bad faux-brick precast at that... the vertical "mortar" is thicker than the horizontal, which makes it look like a black and white polka dot facade from a distance.
 
Definitely faux brick, it does not look like polka dots though. Maybe it's bad quality, but I am happy to see a darker tone being used. Not sure how it will look in the end. I have low expectations, which are currently being exceeded.
 
Last edited:
Yesterday from a nearby cultural institution:

DSC04853.jpg


42
 

Attachments

  • DSC04853.jpg
    DSC04853.jpg
    231.5 KB · Views: 1,269
From earlier this evening:

DSC05434.jpg
DSC05447.jpg
DSC05446.jpg
DSC05448.jpg
DSC05431.jpg
DSC05432.jpg


This is why it's called Dragon Condos: the art at the streetcar stop. Hadn't made the connection before!
DSC05433.jpg


42
 

Attachments

  • DSC05431.jpg
    DSC05431.jpg
    308.2 KB · Views: 1,069
  • DSC05432.jpg
    DSC05432.jpg
    268.8 KB · Views: 1,081
  • DSC05433.jpg
    DSC05433.jpg
    358.7 KB · Views: 1,083
  • DSC05434.jpg
    DSC05434.jpg
    276.5 KB · Views: 1,084
  • DSC05446.jpg
    DSC05446.jpg
    314.7 KB · Views: 1,082
  • DSC05447.jpg
    DSC05447.jpg
    691.3 KB · Views: 1,082
  • DSC05448.jpg
    DSC05448.jpg
    576.5 KB · Views: 1,056
This is why it's called Dragon Condos: the art at the streetcar stop. Hadn't made the connection before!

42

I thought it was named for its proximity to Dragon Mall?
 
There are a lot of dragon references in Chinatown, but I too thought because it is next door to the Dragon Mall, and was once a part of it, is named after it.
 
I hope the Chinatown Centre will be redevelopment some day. I honestly don't know who actually go there, ever, maybe except those old immigrants over 55 years old. It looks so 1990.
 
I hope the Chinatown Centre will be redevelopment some day. I honestly don't know who actually go there, ever, maybe except those old immigrants over 55 years old. It looks so 1990.

Not every development of every part of the city must cater to the under 30 set you know.
 
Not every development of every part of the city must cater to the under 30 set you know.

well easy for you to say but what will happen when those 55+ are dead or too old to walk in 15 years? Look at the new business in Chinatown. Nothing targets the old immigrants. The old ones are increasingly being replaced. The demographic is changing, of course the business model should too, otherswise they go broke.
 
Spadina's already turning into the new Queen West. Add another 10,000 residents and it'll become a trendy restaurant row unaffordable to its aging current demographic. Kensington Market will become just another boring outdoor shopping mall--maybe it's already really the new Yorkville?--with midrises housing yuppie condoKIDS.
 

Back
Top