ushahid
Senior Member
I hope it does get built but bit slimmer version and it's not he ugliest design.
I couldn't disagree more, to fit in with the other CC buildings you need that a little. There is no way they are going to cancel and redraw this. I love the angles and the slanted roof with solar panels. Also how about we show a little positivity for once. Please say one good thing you like about this, one bad thing and then another good thing. The hamburger thing everyone learned in grade 2!Completely agree...cancel and redraw - hire new architects..
I would also add that if the intent is to design an ugly/odd-looking tower, go all the way...The tower cannot decide what decade, or design direction it is leaning toward, so it takes its cues from each everything and nothing.
I couldn't disagree more, to fit in with the other CC buildings you need that a little. There is no way they are going to cancel and redraw this. I love the angles and the slanted roof with solar panels. Also how about we show a little positivity for once. Please say one good thing you like about this, one bad thing and then another good thing. The hamburger thing everyone learned in grade 2!
I agree that criticism can often be misconstrued as negativity, in your first post that was 100% negativity but this new post is criticism so that is much better than you.Blending in with the IM Pei's commerce court is NOT what this building is doing. Also I didn't learn this hamburger thing...so sorry can't help.
Lastly, I think criticism is often misconstrued as negativity - they are not one and the same. One can be critical of something for the sake of wanting to make it better, etc. Design is an iterative process and I tend to feel that there were not enough iterations done...or maybe they called the design done prematurely. In all honesty, this tower does have some nice aspects, they should dig them out and expand on them. Instead it feels the design is a disparate patchwork of HPA's recent design vocabulary.
I was looking over the site from One King West the other day and was horrified at the thought of that lovely plaza disappearing and the block having this tower shoe-horned onto it. It's ungainly and overweight for this block. I recognize that cities change with time and development is often a net positive. In this case, I am not convinced.
Agreed! When complete, this building will be among the most valuable pieces of real-estate in Canada. There is a lot of $$$ at stake. The developers are looking for the greatest ROI and will be considering all options that maximize return. Unlike residential construction, creating a building that is well designed and will attract tenants now and in the long run will optimize returns. I get it that some posters may not like what they see.
And here is why we get C-level architecture in Toronto. Hyper-capitalism. Everything is looked at through the lens of MAXIMUM ROI.
It's OK NOT to make the maximum amount of money possible jaybe. Say it with me now.