dt_toronto_geek
Superstar
I like the podium, at least from the Jarvis Street side. It seems a waste of space (no planned retail) but it still looks good.
It's not the most sophisticated facade, but it's bold and well executed. The wings of different heights framed in white for maximum contrast and the seamless transition between the residential floors and the mechanical penthouse are striking features. The architects tried to maximize the positive visual impact of the building, perhaps after X set an ambitious standard. Americans often seem more inclined towards such boldness, and ordinary people tend to appreciate it more.
Wings of different heights, framed in white, the seamless transition between the central column of the building and the volume above the squared wings.... Aura and Couture (both by G+C) really are very similar designs. If you were to take the mechanical box of Couture, round it and raise its height substantially, you'd more or less have Aura. Let's hope that Aura comes together in the end the way Couture did.
There are many talented photographers on UT. Clearly you haven't seen Fly up close. It's a hideous monstrosity. Chap crap. In person, Couture ain't far behind, clad in some of the lowest-common-denominator, snap-in-place window-wall I've ever seen, until Fly that is.
BRICK! Red Brick! It's tried and tested and true. It adds warmth and charm and character that grey, cold steel, concrete and glass don't!
Totally agreed. But it's become very very expensive. Bricklayers are an increasing rarity, hence why those pre-cast brick-pattern-stamped panels are still cheaper than bricklaying, even when you take into account all the colour that has to be painted on them once they are in place.
Symmetry is important! When I look at this lopsided, sterile, bland disaster of a building, I feel angry and depressed.
If I ever become some successful billionaire/multi-millionaire, I am going to build a M-F red brick tower, smack dab in the middle of the core, or at least somewhere where it can get some exposure.
Symmetry often sucks.
42
So the problem is that no-one becomes a billionaire/multi-millionaire and then builds an M-F brick tower out of altruism for the under-bricked denizens of Toronto. It's all economics, and while we are still getting some brick buildings when developers see fit, unless every purchaser demands it and is willing to pay more for it, we won't see it on a high percentage of buildings.
42
Symmetry serves no functional purpose and generally creates very uninteresting spaces. I doubt you'll find any modern architect who sees it as having any place in the modern context.
(Yes, some features are going to be symmetrical, naturally, but to design an entire building or facade that way is generally problematic.)