adma
Superstar
Well, it sure is better than not having one at all.
Also, King+Bay has a daily life cycle that mimics that of the surrounding towers in the financial district; pretty much dead after five.
Is that your intersection of choice for the heart of downtown Toronto?
You’re missing the point… you’re wasting your time trying to convince us that Yonge and Dundas is not in the “heart of downtown†when any other possible candidate is a short and quick 5 to 10-minute walk away.
On the other hand, Place Blanche, pretty much the only gaudy place in Paris – and for pretty good reasons – is a 20-minute metro ride away from anything that could be called “central.â€
Though, how un-central is Piccadilly Circus? And, for that matter, what is the "heart of downtown London"? Or does it matter?
Maybe the whole problem is that your "what is the heart of downtown Toronto" argument is a splitting-hairs hack argument. Like, there has to be one, specific, all-purpose "heart of it all"--well, maybe the closest spiritual candidate is (naturally) Nathan Phillips Square, and it isn't perfect, but what is? Ultimately, "heart of the downtown" urban logic only serves dumb tourists and Sunday painter urbanists, anyway.
There is a reason why urban planning programs arrange for field trips to cities across North America and Europe. The purpose is to study and analyze other cities, draw inspiration therefrom, implement their successes and avoid their failures.
And Toronto, with its Jane Jacobs legacy-and-it-shows, isn't worthy of such positive-minded field-trip study and analysis?