Tewder
Senior Member
I'm not a fan of Toronto's recent architectural boom from an aesthetic perspective. I know this thread is precisely about aesthetics as most consideration on this forum are. I just wanted to point out how disproportionately weighted aesthetic concerns are here relative to their overall importance to how a city functions.
I'm not so sure I agree. Ugliness, decrepitness and unkemptness may be indications that a city isn't quite functioning right... and as for architecture/design specifically we've seen in Toronto that a prevalence of uninspired and/or cheapened design, sub-par materials and obnoxious developments (inappropriate height/density, destruction of heritage, ignoring of urban pedestrian realm etc) also point to problems such as the lack of planning and political leadership in the city, and the general frontier town-type free for all that exists where developers are the dominant force shaping the city rather than policy etc. In many respects beauty is more than skin deep, in other words.
I am far more concerned about people living great lives. Living in the most aesthetically pleasing surrounding is no substitute for an impoverished life. To consider it the other way, that aesthetics are the most important or primary consideration is like looking at the world through the shallow glasses of a narcissist.
Not necessarily. Spaces that are aesthetically pleasing are uplifting spaces. It's a pretty basic human impulse/drive to seek to elevate one's surroundings to one degree or another, and pleasing communities are really just collective extensions of this. I really cannot base it on any solid evidence but my hunch is that if you look around the world you will find that those who live in inspiring, uplifting and aesthetically 'beautiful' places are living better lives, that there probably is a connection on some level. I mean, how often is poverty beautiful?