wyliepoon
Senior Member
Photos from Doors Open Sunday. After visiting the more centrally-located sites, on this day I visited some of the non-downtown sites, which I travelled to by car.
Holy Blossom Temple (Exterior photos only, no photography allowed inside. The security was very tight there - guards posted at every entrance, airport-style security checks on all visitors before entering. Apparently the Temple has been the target of all sorts of vandalism dating back to at least the 1967 Six-Day War.)
Check out Diamond + Schmitt plan to renovate/rebuild Holy Blossom here.
Montgomery Sisam's Bloorview Kids Rehab was probably the best building I visited this year at Doors Open. A carefully-designed building on the outside and inside to serve patients, staff and visitors alike. The building's colours, materials, and designs are well thought out.
Toronto Botanical Gardens (aka Edward Gardens). The Dembroski Centre is another Montgomery Sisam building, and I also like this building. It is not as colourful as Bloorview, which is good since it does not compete with the plants for attention.
The older Moriyama & Teshima building may have been inspired by Japanese architecture, but I find it similar to Frank Lloyd Wright's Unity Temple, which I saw while in Chicago.
The gardens are very well kept. Wish this level of maintenance could be applied to all parks and green spaces in this city!
The Noor Islamic Cultural Centre (2003), formerly the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre (1963) is a brutalist building, representing a brutal past, the internment of Japanese Canadians during World War II, as represented by the wooden bars over the windows and the chains hanging from the roof drains.
St. Gabriel's Passionist Roman Catholic Church is seen as the highlight building for this year's Doors Open. Winner of the city's green design award, and a LEED Gold Certified building.
The building is certainly unique for a church, but I'm not especially impressed with the architectural design. The exterior is rather plain (I might compare it to the Four Seasons Centre), and the interior looks awfully temporary (sort of like worshipping in an aircraft hangar). The natural lighting is excellent. The construction of St. Gabriel's Village condos in front and beside the church will block the view of the church from Sheppard Avenue (even now the church is obscured by the sales centre for the condo).
Holy Blossom Temple (Exterior photos only, no photography allowed inside. The security was very tight there - guards posted at every entrance, airport-style security checks on all visitors before entering. Apparently the Temple has been the target of all sorts of vandalism dating back to at least the 1967 Six-Day War.)
Check out Diamond + Schmitt plan to renovate/rebuild Holy Blossom here.
Montgomery Sisam's Bloorview Kids Rehab was probably the best building I visited this year at Doors Open. A carefully-designed building on the outside and inside to serve patients, staff and visitors alike. The building's colours, materials, and designs are well thought out.
Toronto Botanical Gardens (aka Edward Gardens). The Dembroski Centre is another Montgomery Sisam building, and I also like this building. It is not as colourful as Bloorview, which is good since it does not compete with the plants for attention.
The older Moriyama & Teshima building may have been inspired by Japanese architecture, but I find it similar to Frank Lloyd Wright's Unity Temple, which I saw while in Chicago.
The gardens are very well kept. Wish this level of maintenance could be applied to all parks and green spaces in this city!
The Noor Islamic Cultural Centre (2003), formerly the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre (1963) is a brutalist building, representing a brutal past, the internment of Japanese Canadians during World War II, as represented by the wooden bars over the windows and the chains hanging from the roof drains.
St. Gabriel's Passionist Roman Catholic Church is seen as the highlight building for this year's Doors Open. Winner of the city's green design award, and a LEED Gold Certified building.
The building is certainly unique for a church, but I'm not especially impressed with the architectural design. The exterior is rather plain (I might compare it to the Four Seasons Centre), and the interior looks awfully temporary (sort of like worshipping in an aircraft hangar). The natural lighting is excellent. The construction of St. Gabriel's Village condos in front and beside the church will block the view of the church from Sheppard Avenue (even now the church is obscured by the sales centre for the condo).




