Condo's ill wind city's salvation
Scaled-back plan could save Yonge-Bloor tower
A Kazakhstan-backed developer has staved off receivership proceedings with a last-minute deal to pay off a defaulted $46 million loan on land at Toronto's Yonge-Bloor intersection.
Jul 21, 2009 04:30 AM
CHRISTOPHER HUME
No one takes joy in the misfortune of others, but the apparent bad news about the proposed condo at Yonge and Bloor could be great news for Toronto.
We know, we know, the chances the city will take advantage of the situation are remote to non-existent, yet the opportunity to wrest the now-derelict site from its squabbling owners and turn it into something worthy – a public square, say – will never come again.
We can already hear the cries of poverty coming from city hall; this is a community that can't afford to collect its own waste, let alone pay for a new square. But before dismissing the idea, perhaps we should consider what it would bring to the neighbourhood in particular and the city in general.
First, let's be honest, though Bloor and Yonge ranks as one of Toronto's most important intersections, it has been treated shabbily for decades. The towers on the north corners are architectural mediocrities that, vampire-like, suck the life from the surroundings. The Hudson's Bay store just east ranks among the city's worst buildings; it is a corporate and civic embarrassment.
On the southwest, it's a clothing shop that deadens things. Then there's the southeast corner, which, thanks to the efforts of a grasping developer, now sits depressingly but gloriously empty.
Of course, it's wrong that the city allows existing structures to be demolished without being certain replacement projects will proceed. This represents a sort of municipally endorsed vandalism that lays bare the contempt with which civic leaders hold the city. As their actions make clear, to them it is nothing but a commodity to be sold to the highest bidder.
In this case, however, because the deal seems to have fallen victim to the usual corporate stupidity and the new economic reality, the city has a chance to redeem itself and revitalize Bloor and Yonge. It goes without saying that such an extravagant scheme would be much too expensive for poor little Trawnna, so let's consider the tactics of the cultural community, which is in a state of perpetual poverty. Rather than lapsing into the institutional negativism we see at city hall, it responded by mounting the biggest and most significant rebuilding campaign in Toronto history.
True, it had to rely on the kindness of strangers, rich strangers, but they turned into philanthropists and made our so-called Cultural Renaissance possible. The city played a minor role in the campaign whose virtues it now extols at every given opportunity.
If we can have a Four Seasons Performing Arts Centre, why not a Royal Bank Square, a Hudson's Bay Plaza, Thomson Place, Weston Way or Pizza-Pizza Piazza?
Let's not forget that Toronto is a city of vast wealth, and even its richest citizens and corporations have a vested interest in maintaining its health and vibrancy.
When the city launched Dundas Square (expropriating the land and putting a parking lot underground) more than a decade ago, it was an attempt to stop the decline of that intersection. That it succeeded will be obvious even to the square's most vocal critics.
As for this site, it's ideal. Facing Yonge and Bloor, it could change both streets for the better. The lot is big enough to become a destination. "This could be a great public space," says Toronto landscape architect Janet Rosenberg. "We could take ideas from the fashion business on Bloor; have runways and fashion shows. Going south from Bloor, Yonge is a bit of a dying street ... the square could help anchor Yonge."
The condo and its tawdry developers could go anywhere; but the square can only be here.
Christopher Hume can be reached at
chume@thestar.ca