Agreed.
It's not enough to say that these buildings are creating a vernacular, a Toronto Style, an aesthetic consensus, a neo-modern constabulary, whatever. Stupidity, inarticulateness, vapidity, plagiarism, dullness, and monotony can have the appearance of a consensus too, if any of these appears widespread in a group.
Southcore - a city in it's own right, all from scratch, from Bathurst to Bay has been put up in about thirty years. And Toronto, architecturally, has blown it. From the fact that over two-thirds of the residential buildings in this zone are twins or triplets of each other to the relentlessly middlebrow architecture, Toronto has blown it. Aside from the CN Tower, there is not a single great or compelling architectural reason to visit the buildings of Southcore. Southcore's functions are saving it, not it's architecture.
Thank God Queen's Quay is being redone. From Bay to Spadina - not well handled at all. We've been looking at it naked and it isn't pretty, so we're bringing in the fig leaves by the truckload. Redoing the street should be an option, if the architecture is pleasing already. But it isn't. The street needs to be redone, just to make the built form enjoyable. That's what bad architecture does. That's the level of competence that southcore is running at and architecture here, generally.
The bar needs to be raised higher in this city. That does not mean that every building has to be iconic, nor could it be. But justifying all this flat-ass mid-level monotony as being acceptable or inevitable....or worse, that we should just be grateful for what we are getting, is ridiculous. If the developers can't afford to put up something that will be a true asset, something with brains and care and interest behind it, then they shouldn't be putting up anything at all, or reduce the scale of their project until they can afford something worthwhile. We have to live with what they do.
Crack open any architectural history book, and there are plenty of strands of modernism to choose from - robust, interesting, bold and engaging of kinds of building. Modernism has something in common with science - invention and adaptation - not stasis. The blank conformity lining the streets of Southcore is not necessarily fitting for Toronto, or good modern architecture at all.
At this point, if the other half of just about every building in Southcore was demolished and replaced with something new, it would be a huge improvement.
Between Karma, 501 Yonge and this building, aA is working real hard to make praising them groundless. I hope this building goes back to redesign. As it probably won't , I'll probably lean to accept it's minimal virtues. Minimal, absolutely. Nothing like living on a minimum to take the cheer out of things.