khris
Senior Member
Almost a month late! Hopefully within the next week we'll see that gap close now.
It appears that the Ritz will be much more slender than the renderings have suggested.
haha from that pic it makes simco place look short and fat, imagine how ritz is going to dwarf both of themYeah, that's definitely true. With its height, it'll make RBC look like a bit of a chunker. Though I still love RBC.
i don't see us ever looking like manhattan, as interesting as that would be. toronto has alot of set distrcits or neighboourhoods that won't permit skyscrapers because of style or heritage.
That will change. Whether the people living in the small homes want it to or not, they can not stop it.
i don't see us ever looking like manhattan
toronto has alot of set distrcits or neighboourhoods that won't permit skyscrapers because of style or heritage.
That will change. Whether the people living in the small homes want it to or not, they can not stop it.
yes, i suppose in the very long run. but do you really want those buildings to be destroyed? i love them. theyre beautiful and are a staple of toronto style and character. the neighbourhoods i mentioned are terrific.
I don't understand why people want Toronto to look like Manhattan? No city will look as much like Manhattan as Manhattan so it seems sort of silly to have this as an objective. In my experience nobody comes to Toronto to marvel at the highrises. They come here and end up loving the dense low-rise urban communities that flow from one to another in and around the downtown core. This is what is so vastly different from 'most' North American cities. The downtown core and skyscrapers are all great too, but they don't define Toronto anymore than 'downtown' LA defines it.
Ditto. The entire GTA is promoting the use of high density structures to try to curb urban sprawl. Toronto in a span of 10 years has developed substantially in terms of high rise construction.
If you ask me, I see a very clear Manhattanization of the city from the CBD and northward along Yonge (Yonge-Dundas, Yonge-Bloor, Yonge-Eglinton, NYCC). Current developments will only expand that thin sliver of high rises.