However, the Design Review Panel this month rejected the Corus building design, and said it will withhold $9-million of its $12.5-million contribution to the project, unless the architects change details
Reasons for the rejection in this article from the January 2008 issue of The Bulletin:
Bait and switch?
Key waterfront building design is cheapened
By Duncan McAllister
Discord over the final designs of the former "Project Symphony" has its developers and backers about to face the music.
The design review panel overseeing the project has objected to changes in design and to the use of cheaper materials than promised. And the project is under construction. But $9 million in financing is being withheld for the controversial building - renamed First Waterfront Place - pending the completion of the design review. As the first development of the East Bayfront precinct, the new home for 1,100 employees of Corus Entertainment at the foot of Jarvis St. lacks significant architectural features that were presented in July. It creates no new jobs, which is the reason the city desires commercial development: “Employment lands.â€
The city, the Toronto Waterfront Revitalization Corp. (TWRC) and the Toronto Economic Development Corp. (TEDCO) have been working through a common process todevelop the project.
According to Marisa Piatteli of Waterfront Toronto,
“TEDCO received conditional approval based on designs before the panel and recommendations with other elements to be included, back in July. The latest designs did not reflect the design that was conditionally approved.â€
Located on the 10 hectares of infill at the south side of Queen’s Quay east of Jarvis slip, formally known as the Queen Elizabeth Docks, the land is owned by TEDCO, a controversial “arms-length†city agency that is frequently criticized and is able to develop city-owned lands that it controls. The planned 8-storey building, a combination of office and retail space, would be approximately 500,000 square feet with an atrium, public space, walkways and underground parking. A public consultation meeting was hosted by Councilor Pam McConnell on March 19 with 143 people attending.
Corus, controlled by the Shaw family of Calgary, was considered to be an ideal tenant for the location to consolidate their 11 Toronto locations under one roof. Corus owns production and animation facilities in Liberty Village and radio stations across Canada. TEDCO Pres. Jeff Steiner, in an April 2007 report to council said, “While 75% of the projected East Bayfront development will be residential, the most difficult development to attract is the 25% employment target, especially knowledge-based, high-quality office and creative workers.†But they’re moving from other parts of Toronto to the water-front.
In a special TWRC board meeting Dec. 7, Mayor David Miller moved that TEDCO prepare a revised submission to the design review panel. They accepted the design panel’s recommendation to withhold approval of the TEDCO plan.
In December the board decided to withhold the lion’s share of the $12.5 million commitment from Waterfront Toronto until TEDCO and their architects, Diamond and Schmitt, can resolve several architectural variances identified by the design panel.
“Our board of directors was very firm on the fact that the $9 million [holdback] was based on design excellence in keeping with and implementing the recommendations flowing from the design review panel,†says Piattelli.
Bruce Kuwabara, architect and head of the design review panel, criticized the loss of the central feature: “The ‘egg-like’ conference room which appeared to float in the centre of the atrium has been replaced with a conventional room, eliminating the only distinctive architectural form visible on the south façade from the water’s edge.â€
In addition, Kuwabara outlines several other major design issues in a Nov. 30 memo published on the Waterfront Toronto website that includes a loss of urban profile, predominance of service entries and a compromised atrium.
Building materials have been substituted, he reports—the original plans called for black granite columns, now replaced with pre-cast concrete. The document shows before and after renderings which make clear where corners have been cut.
“The good news is TEDCO has been asked to resubmit the design [in] keeping with the understanding of what the recommendations of the panel were,†says Piattelli. “We’re very hopeful that they will present something which goes back to what the design review panel saw—in fact had been very excited about.â€
According to Eva Varangu of TEDCO, “This is an exciting opportunity to revitalize the waterfront with Corus Entertainment. TEDCO is working closely with the city, Waterfront Toronto and the Waterfront Design Review Panel to resolve concerns about the design, while working within our tenant’s requirements. We have already held further meetings and will continue to work together to make this first building on the East Bayfront the best we can.â€
Not everyone is as excited about the development. Some residents and business owners were hoping for public spaces rather than a commercial building, although the site is actually zoned for mixed-use.
“For seven years we went to public meetings for the East Bayfront, and the resounding call from both business owners and residents in the area was for public space,“ says JimMirkopoulos, of Cinespace film studios.
As the previous land users of that site, Cinespace leased a building from TEDCO. For 12 years, 175 Queens Quay was the home of a thriving 150,000-square-foot film production facility called Marine Terminal Studios.
A year ago they were given just two months’ notice to vacate the property to make way for the Bayshore project. Mirkopoulos appealed to the mayor—with 30 letters from film producers and over 6,000 signatures—to delay the eviction as they had productions underway. The mayor did not respond. As a result, Cinespace vacated Marine Terminal 28 in February to make way for the new development. In a letter to the editor to The Toronto Star, Mirkopoulos wrote that “TEDCO’s ‘Project Symphony’ reverses seven years of waterfront consultations by placing a commercial building at the site contravenes the mandated architectural competitive process to achieve design excellence and only transplants existing jobs from Liberty Village instead of attracting new ones, as originally advertised.â€
January 2008 The Bulletin
www.TheBulletin.ca
http://www.thetorontobulletin.com/Archives/jan08.pdf
Central Atrium June 13, 2007 plan
Central Atrium Nov. 14, 2007 plan
The difference five months can make is displayed here in this comparison prepared by Waterfront Toronto. It shows how the TEDCO-Corus building first attracted praise from architects for its beauty and novelty. It won quick approval, especially for the ‘egg’ feature in the June design. City funding has been withheld because TEDCO and Corus revamped the praiseworthy aspects for a perhaps lower-quality, less publicly functional building.
Ground-floor plan changes dramatically from the approved architectural concept at top. June 13, 2007Nov. 14, 2007