RyeJay
New Member
Steveve - I get what you are alluding to. While in a sense, it is an accident of history, the Toronto skyline has been dominated by buildings away from the waterfront (...) Another newbie comment to be regarded as such....
It is naïve to consider political decisions to industrialise Lake Ontario as "accidents." History doesn't magically happen.
Your denigration via post count is not something a thinking responder would convey. You haven't the awareness of who frequents this site. You are completely ignorant of this community's credentials. Even someone holding a Ph.D must commence with post number one.
Steveve: aside from anyone else's illusions of what you might be thinking, the point you were making about the CN Tower's overpowering height relative to the downtown's building stock isn't something I consider unattractive, even if you wish to characterise this skyline angle as "stubby." The city's core is filling in and gradually helping the City to become economically sustainable. When Toronto's downtown is viewed from an objective perspective there is actually a lot to celebrate.
There will be a day when downtown Toronto will grow to be 3X larger; and on that day there will still be complainers trying to locate some visual angle of a skyline that annoys them somehow.