someMidTowner
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Today:
Maybe not in those words but this certainly seems to imply something along those lines:
You're really splitting hairs here - it's fine to like symmetry but as Junctionist said above, to believe that it alone can create better buildings limits one's creativity to a far more finite set of expressions.
So let me offer this: Do I like Couture? Nope. Would it have been better had G+C made it symmetrical? Nope.
This building will be another Sheraton Centre/Robarts in a few years. Just like the futuristic feel that even those two monsters espoused back in the day, this too will eventually be reviled by everyone.
The Futuristic Factory look that has become so popular in Toronto.
This building ("Couture", it is not) will be another Sheraton Centre/Robarts in a few years. Just like the futuristic feel that even those two monsters espoused back in the day, this too will eventually be reviled by everyone. We'll have a skyline of cheesy and hideous relics, kind of like we have already.
If we stop designing buildings to look futuristic and flashy in only their time of construction, we won't be left with so many hideous duds in the future.
4grand, the Sheraton and (especially) Robarts are not reviled by everyone, nor will this building likely become a "cheesy and hideous" relic. Your comment started off strangely, since you attempted to assert that two of my favourite buildings in the city are hated by everyone, which would theoretically include me. It became even stranger when you attempted to predict what people will think of this building in the future. Anyways, it looks more like a rehash of another modernism-genre building that was recently constructed in the area, to me, than it does "futuristic and flashy." Having different opinions is fine, but you shouldn't assume that everyone views things in the same light that you do.
Your comment started off strangely, since you attempted to assert that two of my favourite buildings in the city are hated by everyone, which would theoretically include me.
Hey, you're right, there are philistines like you out there. People who admire depressing, drab, concrete slabs. Thankfully, there aren't many like you anymore, and we don't have more "Brutalist" disasters being built today.
By the way, I'm sure you know this, but "brutalism" is a retrospective term, because we looked back and realized how brutal these designs were.
It's not called "Beautifulism".
Hey, you're right, there are philistines like you out there. People who admire depressing, drab, concrete slabs. Thankfully, there aren't many like you anymore, and we don't have more "Brutalist" disasters being built today.
By the way, I'm sure you know this, but "brutalism" is a retrospective term, because we looked back and realized how brutal these designs were.
It's not called "Beautifulism".
It's a bit comical to call others philistines, then get the definition of something pretty simple so completely wrong.
4grand, the Sheraton and (especially) Robarts are not reviled by everyone, nor will this building likely become a "cheesy and hideous" relic. Your comment started off strangely, since you attempted to assert that two of my favourite buildings in the city are hated by everyone, which would theoretically include me. It became even stranger when you attempted to predict what people will think of this building in the future.
Sorry Interchange, I don't mean to belabour the point or dance on a grave but...
It's a bit comical to call others philistines, then get the definition of something pretty simple so completely wrong. 'Brutalism' refers to 'béton brut' or 'raw concrete' and was coined in the early 50's by pioneering social housing duo Peter and Alison Smithson. It's not a retrospective term.
This post warms my heart.