Archivist
Senior Member
Patriot, perhaps your first language is not English, but the more I read your posts the more the dunce cap applies.
The building should be torn down. The owner has invested no money in the fascade, which is crumbling and shaddy looking. The owner is either cheap, or cash-strapped to invest money into the propery. If the building was renovated, it could have easily accommodated a nice respectable multi-level restaurant or flagship store.
The whole corner is falling a part - between this and the stalled Ryerson demolition project across the street.
No, I'm not suggesting that. There is much heritage worth fighting for, imo, but you yourself insisted on the offputting nature of heritage 'overinsistance'... and in a city with no mythology, who but the pointiest-headed archi-geek or the nerdiest subscriber to the Beaver or whatever it's called 'these days' is really going to bother to 'overinsist' in the first place? Or who is even going to listen, more to the point? These circumstances are different in other 'major' cities... and if you still feel that an enormous pressure for growth in the city combined with a lack of mythology/fundamental relationship to its history and heritage will have little effect on heritage preservation in Toronto then don't be surprised to get 'mugged/raped' yet again.
No, it would be more accurate to characterize it as like living in a neighbourhood full of (un)known sex-offenders, being sexually raped on several occassions recently and in a variety of circumstances yet refusing to acknowledge there may be any common underlaying issues.
Great news, I guess it now forces the city to restore the entire building.
... in the case of Boston City Hall, I don't see the mass vilification as reflective of a strong mythology; rather, it reflects a mythology that's weak where it counts. But in the case of Toronto's City Hall, if our mythology were as "weak where it counts" as Boston's, then the NPS walkways would have been swept away as per Councillor Milczyn's original bright idea.
And the fact that there is a certain common, non-apathetic pro-heritage engagement, at all, to the Yonge & Gould circumstance (and other previous collapses, demolitions, etc) proves that when you scratch the surface a little, we're not so inherently mythology-devoid or mythology-unsympathetic as it seems. (And thank God for Councillor Kyle Rae to drive the point home in this case; were somebody like Rob Ford the local councillor, then the site'd be vacant by now.) Sometimes, disasters have a paradoxical way of doing that. Maybe it's a limited active "we" I'm referring to; but it isn't like it isn't that much more unlimited in the different-cirumstance locales elsewhere--face it: the vast majority everywhere is, if not actively hostile, then at least indifferent or "let George do it" about heritage issues. Technically, the limited pool of "overinsisters" you refer to is everywhere.
Tewder--maybe it comes with being conditioned through this here realm of skyscraper/development-focussed message boards, blogs, etc, but something about you strikes me as an awkward Johnny-come-lately when it comes to heritage, urban mythology, et al. May I recommend that you don't let yourself lie prostrate before the wide-eyed development nerds or the cranky-amateur newspaper-blog-commenters or the "enormous pressure for growth" scare-tacticians.
...by such metaphorical parameters, how many neighbourhoods aren't like that? And you might as well construe (real or perceived) leering as "sexual rape"--actual rape being rare by comparison (think wartime destruction, or a few select megalosses like Penn Station). In any case, it doesn't mean one has to engage in radical-feminist or Catherine MacKinnon paranoia about it, esp. if a defter Madonna/Gaga/whatever approach is available.
And substitute, in your statement, gay bashing for sexual violation, and you might as well be condemning all queers to sympathetic-yet-inert gay-ghettos--thus compounding the problem. If you pardon my lingo, just because one is a faggot doesn't mean one has to be such a faggot about it. (By comparison, I'm all for a disarming "there's a little fag in all of us" approach. Likewise referencing Madonna/Gaga, I suppose.)
At the end of the day you and Archivist take a positive spin on the state of heritage preservation and its future while I, though not disagreeing there are positives to celebrate, feel there are many legitimate concerns to work through. Nuff said?
I agree with Tewder--whatever one thinks of Boston's architecture, they have a far stronger commitment to preserving it than we currently do. And from the way adma writes, one would think they'd demolished their City Hall already. far from it, and it looks increasingly unlikely to happen.
The city doesn't own the building. The owner can decide to (and probably will) only fix the collapsed portion to make it safe and allow it to be leasable again.
Unless an investor can be found to buy out the property, I don't see why the current owner would do anything differently than before. If they didn't have money/willpower to renovate the building before -- even using wood planks to prop up deteriorating brick -- what makes us think they'll have a change of heart now?
But on account of your opinion of Richard Serra, I'm tempted to bind you in with the hack amateurs as well...
Well, I don't disagree, and I doubt that Archivist would, either--but it's really a no-brainer issue. And I still feel your painting of things in roll-over-and-play-dead weak terms, including said "legitimate concerns", is overwrought--like, by extension, we shouldn't even bother thinking in terms of heritage in places like Mississauga because the deck's so "obviously" stacked there.
But when it comes to something like Boston, as I see it, a well-rounded and healthy current-day "heritage mythology" is one that'd encompass Boston City Hall together with, well, "the older stuff"--maybe not to the frozen-in-amber point in either case; but, still.
And the fact that, in real terms, it's difficult to universalize such ambidexterity among regular armchair-heritage-mythology-loving Bostonians, as opposed to what to them might be the, uh, Polanski-defender-esque universe of academics and architectural buffs--yeah, there, too, the "marginal special interest" camp of optimum heritage sensitivity--well, there's the proof that at the end of the day, regular Bostonians aren't so unlike regular Torontonians in being, uh, amateur hacks and/or reactionaries. Albeit perhaps with a different thrust.
In the end, maybe, this isn't merely a "state of heritage preservation" issue, but more about something hit-the-ground-running meta-mythological, i.e. the ability to creatively appreciate our existing fabric in a way that can ultimately feed the heritage cause, among other things.
So you're telling me the owner can leave the building in it's current state as is, and the city would allow it?