maxt797
Active Member
Nothing to write home about with these two...
I think you have given everyone more reasons to hate this project more. Just saying...If you think this project sucks, I'm sorry but IMO you're a bit delusional or at least pretentious. You pretend to know what the acceptable standard of design is in Toronto. If you think the south side of this project looks better than the north side, again IMO, you are a pretender. You pretend to have architectural taste and a keen eye for spotting elegant design elements.
Why don't we all state the obvious: Toronto ain't no Dubai nor Miami or the Gold Coast in Queensland. Toronto has a very mediocre landscape with a less-than-stellar lake that is FAR from the beauty of an actual sea, or ocean. It has less than stellar weather, which thankfully averages a little over 2000 hours of sunlight per year, the bare minimum to at least function psychologically here. Compare TO to a city like Chicago, which last time i checked, does NOT have better-looking condo buildings than us.
These towers ain't half bad. They have prominence in the skyline, fairly attractive cladding/hue, and good width-to-height proportions. The podium is a bit bulky but not devoid of variation of design elements/dynamism. I like the lighter protruding section on the north side.
The main issue in TO is affordability. How a plywood doll house or a shoe-box in the sky can run in the millions of dollars, in this drabby, overcast city is the real issue, IMO. Thank you for reading this far and take it easy.
At least I'm not pretending Toronto can realistically rival the likes of Dubai or Billionaires' Row. Toronto will NEVER be a traditionally 10/10 sexy city. Not unless you can somehow elongate James Bay and connect it to lake Ontario. Or, alternatively, lower Wasaga Beach to Newmarket. Whichever is easier. And in my experience, cities that don't score a 10 in natural geography, DON"t have stellar architecture. Because money follows natural beauty. And not just in real estateI think you have given everyone more reasons to hate this project more. Just saying...
Why don't we all state the obvious: Toronto ain't no Dubai nor Miami or the Gold Coast in Queensland.
If you think this project sucks, I'm sorry but IMO you're a bit delusional or at least pretentious. You pretend to know what the acceptable standard of design is in Toronto. If you think the south side of this project looks better than the north side, again IMO, you are a pretender. You pretend to have architectural taste and a keen eye for spotting elegant design elements.
Why don't we all state the obvious: Toronto ain't no Dubai nor Miami or the Gold Coast in Queensland. Toronto has a very mediocre landscape with a less-than-stellar lake that is FAR from the beauty of an actual sea, or ocean. It has less than stellar weather, which thankfully averages a little over 2000 hours of sunlight per year, the bare minimum to at least function psychologically here. Compare TO to a city like Chicago, which last time i checked, does NOT have better-looking condo buildings than us.
These towers ain't half bad. They have prominence in the skyline, fairly attractive cladding/hue, and good width-to-height proportions. The podium is a bit bulky but not devoid of variation of design elements/dynamism. I like the lighter protruding section on the north side.
The main issue in TO is affordability. How a plywood doll house or a shoe-box in the sky can run in the millions of dollars, in this drabby, overcast city is the real issue, IMO. Thank you for reading this far and take it easy.
C'mon now... I wouldn't say trash, just tacky and tasteless.His example…Dubai. “City” of falsehoods, slave labour, and trash architecture.