3Dementia
Senior Member
Fantastic news from today's Star:
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Group pulls funding, says best parts of building plans gone
Dec 08, 2007 04:30 AM
Christopher Hume
Urban issues columnist
In the first test of its commitment to architectural excellence, Waterfront Toronto has made it clear it will accept no substitutes.
The occasion came yesterday when the Waterfront Design Review Panel recommended the agency withdraw its support for the $150-million headquarters the Toronto Economic Development Corporation is building for Corus Entertainment.
The board endorsed the panel decision unanimously and withdrew $9 million of its $12.5 million contribution to the project until new designs are submitted and approved. Most of the budget, $132 million, will come from the city in the form of a loan to TEDCO.
The concrete-and-glass structure, at the foot of Jarvis St. on Lake Ontario, will be the first constructed under the aegis of Waterfront Toronto (formerly the Toronto Waterfront Development Corp.).
Panel members have had issues with the design since it was presented last February. Though changes were made, improvements added and conditional approval granted, panel chair Bruce Kuwabara said they weren't enough.
"There was much discussion and a huge amount of disappointment," Kuwabara told the waterfront board yesterday. "The things that were interesting are gone. We cannot support this project."
Specifically, the panel was concerned about the much-reduced public nature of the atrium, especially the elimination of a striking egg-shaped conference room, as well as the preponderance of loading bays and loss of roof terraces. The panel was also worried the materials have been downgraded; in one instance, pre-cast concrete pillars have replaced black granite columns. The big criticism was that the building would do little to enhance the skyline or the waterfront.
TEDCO president Jeff Steiner countered that many of the panel's concerns were based on misunderstandings, but insisted the building would be improved.
"We will make all the changes that are possible," he said. "But we need better clarity from the panel."
Mayor David Miller, a Waterfront Toronto board member, was clearly unimpressed by what he saw. It was he who introduced the motion that upheld the panel's decision.
"If it's not done with design excellence," Miller declared, "it won't work. What Waterfront Toronto did today was to say that you have to achieve design excellence."
Chris Glaisek, Waterfront Toronto's vice-president of planning and design, was elated. "I'm thrilled we got to this point," he said. "It's incredibly significant that the board supported the panel."
Waterfront Toronto president and CEO John Campbell agreed. "It's critical that the board has expressed its support for the panel. It reinforces the need for great architecture on the waterfront."
But time is short; excavation has started and TEDCO wants to begin construction as soon as possible. Though the city has granted TEDCO a foundation permit, it has yet to approve the site plan. Given the mayor is on the waterfront board, that's unlikely to happen until the panel likes what it sees.
Steiner remained adamant, however, that all would end well.
"They'll all say it's a fantastic building," he argued. "Its role is to play a buffer to Redpath Sugar (just west). It's a beautiful building. It's a real building. But it's not the public building everybody wanted."
Steiner was referring to earlier speculation that the site might be the location of a major cultural facility, rather than a corporate office. "We are reviewing TEDCO's mandate," said Miller, concerned, perhaps, that the deal could cost taxpayers a lot more and deliver a lot less than promised.