Automation Gallery
Superstar
Who cares, Toronto is a growing city...don't like it move outYep. The NIMBYS are going to have a field day with one.
Who cares, Toronto is a growing city...don't like it move outYep. The NIMBYS are going to have a field day with one.
Who cares, Toronto is a growing city...don't like it move out
Growth still needs to be handled delicately to maintain the high quality of life. Your attitude is like using a sledgehammer to open a crate with fragile written on it.
I agree but it's also worth recognizing a growing degree of frustration that's building with a lot of people. High density growth is being managed and planned by a substantial number of people who don't actually like high density. Their comfort level with it is relatively muted. When 300m in the core makes people go ballistic one has to question whether they're living in the right part of the city. Toronto needs to be for everyone; that includes those who like super high density.
In reality, a very small % of metro Toronto's land area will end up with super high density. If downtown is getting too dense there's 95% of the rest of metro where they can live. The downtown should be allowed to be that small pocket where it can occur.
There's also the argument that our infrastructure can't handle it. Rather than putting brakes on the density shouldn't they be focusing in on upgrading/expanding the infrastructure? We have a lot of smart people who can figure out how to do that if they can't. There seems to be an inbred denial of where the downtown is heading and its impinging on our ability to manage that growth optimally.
Super talls are coming. Maybe even a mega tall (600m+) one day. Let's plan for it. Fighting it tooth and nail is no way to react to something that's obviously in demand in this market.
he meant 121 feet not meters. btw 121 feet is 37m
I agree but it's also worth recognizing a growing degree of frustration that's building with a lot of people. High density growth is being managed and planned by a substantial number of people who don't actually like high density. Their comfort level with it is relatively muted. When 300m in the core makes people go ballistic one has to question whether they're living in the right part of the city. Toronto needs to be for everyone; that includes those who like super high density.
In reality, a very small % of metro Toronto's land area will end up with super high density. If downtown is getting too dense there's 95% of the rest of metro where they can live. The downtown should be allowed to be that small pocket where it can occur.
There's also the argument that our infrastructure can't handle it. Rather than putting brakes on the density shouldn't they be focusing in on upgrading/expanding the infrastructure? We have a lot of smart people who can figure out how to do that if they can't. There seems to be an inbred denial of where the downtown is heading and its impinging on our ability to manage that growth optimally.
Super talls are coming. Maybe even a mega tall (600m+) one day. Let's plan for it. Fighting it tooth and nail is no way to react to something that's obviously in demand in this market.
Judging from the preliminaries it looks like it could be an elegant and imposing tower, and refreshing to a see a large project uncluttered with balconies. That said I didn't hate the older Quadrangle design and I actually quite liked their bridge component. I much preferred the street level design of the older project as well, this new one is much less interesting and doesn't seem to add much to the street-cape.