yin_yang
Active Member
they could very well push this baby through to concide with the LRT (or vice-versa) as they might very likely be thinking of building the LRT station under the new mall. good stuff!
Of course, "should be" but that's not the same thing as "will".Cap at 40 means focus should be on stunning architecture, not sheer height.
Good idea. Especially with this long depression, it'll take decades to build out. Cap at 40 means focus should be on stunning architecture, not sheer height.
Source:
To be honest, it looks like they're trying to turn Y-E into a *pretty* little area, while giving up a bit of it's ability to be an alternative downtown. If you ask me, there's a huge amount of potential to make Y-E a big development node, with a large number of offices and high rise condos. At least one big office tower (maybe a unique design to give the intersection some more identity while working with the condos currently there, and the whole area filled with mid rise condos and offices. By doing that, it'd create a natural node right at the intersection, and would allow the area to grow naturally. I don't think there would be a lot of complaint over a 50-60 story building if it was at the centre of a much larger area for mid-rises that could be (relatively) painlessly integrated into the preexisting community.
I think they should be encouraging at least one big new office tower to go up, and allow a lot more businesses in. The whole corridor from Yonge to around Laird could also have a lot done to it, and the city should be intently looking at that for developers to get some more stuff going, with a large high density area at Y-E as an anchor. There's already a fair bit of stuff going on in that area, but I think it's been pretty well left alone for a while.
I can sympathize for the residents who don't want high rises next to their house, but I have to be frank, the greater good of letting Y-E grow kind of trumps their plight. The city should be trying to seamlessly make it flow from high rise to mid rise to houses, but I think that from the rendering and what the plans seem to be, they're just thinking too small. The residents are saying "absolutely no tall buildings" so they're trying to spread things out, which I think is the wrong way to be doing things.
In terms of visuals, the two condo towers there easily sets the stage for one large 50-60 story office building opposite of Eglinton, where I believe there's a small scotiabank building currently. This would create a large area of focus at the intersection, on either side of Yonge between Y-E centre and large unnamed office building. From there, they could build out low rise mixed use condos all around the area, but it needs a destination anchor, and a large office building is the best way I can think of doing that.