rbt
Senior Member
...is there any citation or source on the bottom bullet's claim of turning OSC current site into private condos? I can't seem to find anything on that.
Zero. It's city land, and Chow isn't going to go that direction.
...is there any citation or source on the bottom bullet's claim of turning OSC current site into private condos? I can't seem to find anything on that.
Hope so!Zero. It's city land, and Chow isn't going to go that direction.
And ironically, "the Main building up top" is the part which, thanks to its IMAX-centric 90s alterations, has the *least* Moriyama-era architectural integrity intact.The Former CEO and Chief Scientist of the OSC is out with an opinion piece in The Star suggesting that its probably time to let the OSC in its current location go.
But he doesn't advocate for demolishing the Main building up top, suggesting perhaps a repurposing.
These might help?Here's a question I've been wondering that I bet no one knows the answer to...
The ground where three main pods sit, was that naturally there or was that a huge man made hill?
Reason I ask is because the Don Valley everywhere else in Toronto just kind of falls off - once. It doesn't have a cliff and then another hill in front of the first big cliff.
In other words, topographically, it would seem more usual that the escalators would descend into the valley from the main entrance building, rather than a bridge across the full depth of the valley to another section of land at the same height and then escalators down to the valley floor.
Unless Moriyama's team found a unique little section where this was naturally occurring that just happened to coincide perfectly with Don Mills & Eglinton.
Here's a topographic map of the section.
View attachment 576411
View attachment 576412
I really miss the fountain. It’s a shame it fell into disrepair in the 90s.Original was so much more grand. Made you feel small. Which was fun.
View attachment 576408
View attachment 576409
View attachment 576410
Thanks for those. Great photos. Looks like it was probably natural.These might help?
He’s damn right the business model is broken. Not only that the culture within is unrepairable.The Former CEO and Chief Scientist of the OSC is out with an opinion piece in The Star suggesting that its probably time to let the OSC in its current location go.
But he doesn't advocate for demolishing the Main building up top, suggesting perhaps a repurposing.
The main thrust of his piece aside from the poor condition of the existing building is that the business model of the OSC is broken no matter where you put it, and that that needs addressing.
The OSC needs far more robust ancillary revenues (parking, concession/food, complimentary retail/merch) as well as more robust grants, and a lower cost to operate and maintain building.
I led the Ontario Science Centre for five years. This is the real reason it’s time to let go of the old building
Rather than fighting the relocation based on nostalgia, the future viability of the science centre would be better served by the public holding the government to account on conditions aroundwww.thestar.com
The day they decided to get rid of the loop and build the teluscape was the beginning of the end for the centre.Original was so much more grand. Made you feel small. Which was fun.
View attachment 576408
View attachment 576409
View attachment 576410
I think that there is still merit in keeping at least some of the structures- the IMAX theatre + auditorium/planetarium are definitely assets, and I think that the Main and the Mid-level buildings could be kept and repurposed (perhaps a new institution through philanthropy?). While the OSC going is unfortunate, there could be some excitement to be seen in the potential birth of a new Toronto-owned institution on this site.
The OSC theatre is actually OmniMAX (even more immersive than IMAX). The OmniMAX projected images can fill nearly 90% of the surrounding dome theatre... absolutely worth saving!!I think that there is still merit in keeping at least some of the structures- the IMAX theatre + auditorium/planetarium are definitely assets, and I think that the Main and the Mid-level buildings could be kept and repurposed (perhaps a new institution through philanthropy?). While the OSC going is unfortunate, there could be some excitement to be seen in the potential birth of a new Toronto-owned institution on this site.