Toronto Forma | 308m | 84s | Great Gulf | Gehry Partners

I think I can safely say that we should let David Mirvish worry about the theatre business in Toronto....seeing as I doubt there's anyone who knows more about how to operate in the theatre business than him. He'll be just fine without input from the peanut gallery.

Speaking of galleries, I can't believe all this energy is being spent pooping our pants over the loss of these vapid and inconsequential warehouses, instead of rubbing our hands with glee over the idea of gaining something as critical as a new gallery containing the private collection of David Mirvish, which I assure you...is of significance.


Well said,

I can assure you that many who complain that the theater is going to be torn down haven't even been there. Like many have said, the theater wasn't gaining any popularity and is not as significant as people claim it is. Sure, that doesn't mean the theater should be torn down, but considering what we're gaining, why not? It's not like it is our last theater standing in town.
 
Speaking of galleries, I can't believe all this energy is being spent pooping our pants over the loss of these vapid and inconsequential warehouses, instead of rubbing our hands with glee over the idea of gaining something as critical as a new gallery containing the private collection of David Mirvish, which I assure you...is of significance.

Look, I don't disagree that his collection is of significance. I don't think many if any sensible people would. And in fact, compared to some on this thread, I'm actually been rather measured and nuanced re the "heritage issue", even offering to be preemptively critical t/w the heritage status quo in certain respects, and almost one-upping you in that regard by being cognizant of a certain bigger picture out there. Look: I've been the one bringing up Koolhaas, "Cronocaos", and "Insignificant Universal Junk". You haven't. And I'm the one matter-of-factly judging the terra-cotta facade as "ungainly", or the Princess of Wales reflecting a certain Fukuyamaesque "end of architectural history" good-mannered dead-endedness--like, this is what it all came to by the early 90s: "is that it"? And all in all, it's just li'l ole me as the fly on the wall--I'm not doing this to overembrace the existing Mirvish frontages, or to overcondemn them. I'm doing it in order to be magnanimously preemptive. And so, my advice is neither "save this block" or "rip it down"--it is: tread cautiously. Not boldly. Cautiously. Yeah, a lot of you want "boldly" because you fear that caution will mean squandering a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity--but AFAIC the critical bold tread (for now) has already been done, through Mirvish/Gehry presenting the scheme. That's it. For now. Now, to make it, or *anything* possible, we have to exercise caution. Because there's a multitude of interests involved. Allow everyone to catch their breath, take stock, and strike necessary compromises...because now that we're in the "tread cautiously" stage, this is where the fun stuff begins.

And besides, big deal about "once-in-a-lifetime opportunities." As I like to rhetorically say, the critical aesthetic thing of our time is 9/11. I'm one w/Stockhausen on this; in its sheer psychic wallop, the universal enormity of destruction, it's beyond Gehry, it's beyond the Mirvish collection. And yet, I wouldn't wish another 9/11 upon us. Like the Lyndon Johnson "Daisy" commercial in 1964, once is enough. However, in my rhetorical embrace of 9/11, well...if one recalls my "what if the new Penn Station were by Mies?" argument, 9/11 does to Gehry/Mirvish what Mies does to Charles Luckman. It makes it look wan and inadequate by comparison.

So, with that, that's where my inner anarchist comes out. Big deal about Gehry/Mirvish. Toronto will live on. And if you still have an "inadequacy complex" about such a loss, that's your problem.

And honestly, freshcutgrass, let me tell you this: the way you express yourself, in dismissing so-called "vapid and inconsequential warehouses" and all: there's a disturbing curtness, like a guy grunting at his girlfriend when she says "we have to talk". You're very obviously coming into this with virtually no innate affinity for or grace in handling 2012-style heritage concerns at all. That is, innate. It has to be proven to you. (And maybe re the "grunting" metaphor, it bespeaks a certain machismo within "design/development" culture, while the heritage/existing-conditions folks might be more inherently estrogenny. Context's gutting of Ryrie is "guy stuff"; 401 Richmond is pure Margie Zeidler, because when it comes to handling existing latently-heritage conditions, Gurls Do It Better;-))
 
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Look: I've been the one bringing up Koolhaas, "Cronocaos", and "Insignificant Universal Junk". You haven't.

Yes...and I just can't wait for you to utter that phrase for the 23rd time. Because this is all about....you....right?

If it were possible for you condense your giant self-absorbed, paraphrased posts into a point, that resembled a sentence (somewhat relevant to the topic)...what would it look like I wonder?

And honestly, freshcutgrass, let me tell you this: the way you express yourself, in dismissing so-called "vapid and inconsequential warehouses" and all: there's a disturbing curtness, like a guy grunting at his girlfriend when she says "we have to talk"
.

I'm gonna have to ask you to stop inventing all these completely absurd personal characterizations based solely on my opinion of the heritage value of a couple of nondescript warehouses. I know you're just working your way down a long list of fallacious argument techniques...but try to show a little dignity in the process.


So, with that, that's where my inner anarchist comes out. Big deal about Gehry/Mirvish. Toronto will live on. And if you still have an "inadequacy complex" about such a loss, that's your problem.

There is an inner something coming out there...I'm just not sure anarchy is it. Big deal about anything then. That argument is as weak and pointless as your "9/11" angle.

401 Richmond is pure Margie Zeidler, because when it comes to handling existing latently-heritage conditions, Gurls Do It Better;-))

Aside from that being a baseless statement, it's a poor example, as anyone who's met Margie Zeidler will attest....she's not very "gurly".
 
Anyone have any idea when this project will be presented to council for approval, rejection or whatever? The oxford proposal with the casino and now Kyle Rae may take some of the attention off this project, and maybe, just maybe, they won't demand too many changes to this project. It's a long shot, but you never know.
 
To assume that once the parking lots are filled in that developers will turn to historic areas ignores the vast reservior of banal buildings of no merit which can be replaced in the core.


... which sort of hones in on the point here: who gets to decide what is 'without merit' or replaceable? The developers? Flash a preliminary Gehry model to that crowd and *poof* a whole block of 'mundane' heritage buildings is gone, along with a theatre that all of a sudden is deemed 'unnecessary'... and along with a significant swatch of the urban fabric that makes the area so vibrant and successful to start with. To which:

The reason developers are attracted to the city's central historic areas is because they are vibrant, successfully urban... and desired! They are attracted here, despite pesky heritage designation obstacles, and despite the cost/benefit challenges of a building stock that is predominantly low rise and low density. In the end, they love these areas so much they need to destroy them... yay! Remember, over time, it isn't the 'popular' heritage areas that survive - and downtown Toronto is an excellent case study for this - so much as the unloved and neglected ones (NOTL for example)... but, supposedly we are smarter than this now, right? Supposedly we wouldn't repeat the development mistakes of the past? In fact, this project shocks us because it is a stark reminder that we haven't come very far at all!
 
Yes...and I just can't wait for you to utter that phrase for the 23rd time. Because this is all about....you....right?

If it were possible for you condense your giant self-absorbed, paraphrased posts into a point, that resembled a sentence (somewhat relevant to the topic)...what would it look like I wonder?

Maybe not as "condensed" as you'd like, but read the rest of the paragraph you snipped from, re "proceed cautiously". It's absolutely relevant, in a way that condenses and mediates among all sides.

Look: "proceeding cautiously" worked for Gehry at ROM, and it didn't mean his having to torture himself over the more overinsistent demands of a Ceta Ramalamadingdong.

I'm gonna have to ask you to stop inventing all these completely absurd personal characterizations based solely on my opinion of the heritage value of a couple of nondescript warehouses. I know you're just working your way down a long list of fallacious argument techniques...but try to show a little dignity in the process.

Under the circumstances: dignity, schmignity--sometimes, it takes a jester, a fool, to frame and highlight the truth.

And beyond that: yeah, the problem may be in how Toronto handles its heritage/listing/designation process, which leads to all these tripwires (it would have been better if Toronto had a more thoroughgoing letter/colour-coding system rather than the crude listing/designation system it's been coasting on for some 40 years). However, even there, I reckon said warehouses would be deemed inherently valid as heritage properties anywhere--which, perhaps, may say more about heritage norms across the board in 2012, than in Toronto in particular. And if you disagree, it's a reason why your sort tends not to be on heritage bodies, as opposed to deputing against them. Like, within such a realm, you'd be received as the equivalent of someone arguing against affirmative action because "its job is done: time to move on".

Aside from that being a baseless statement, it's a poor example, as anyone who's met Margie Zeidler will attest....she's not very "gurly".

Yeah, and that's why, from a heritage standpoint, I'd gladly endorse her to rip the testicles out of your configuration of "heritage worth";-)

But it's worth reflecting upon 401 Richmond and Ryrie as representing interesting poles of heritage reuse approach.

In the former case--I mean, if you're one to attack oppressive and street-deading warehouses, that's the most oppressive and street-deadening of them all (and the net effect of the Richmond one-way widening in the 60s didn't help matters). And it wasn't even on the inventory, much less designated, until 2007! That is, when Margie Zeidler tackled it, it had no official heritage status whatsoever. Yet the Zeidler approach was to respect the inherent properties of what existed, treat the raw materials available in inherently "heritage" terms, and make it into something much richer--something that doesn't need the assent of "heritage bodies", it just requires a good intuitive sense of everything. (Though yes, it helped that there was the subtext of 401 Richmond already having been an ad hoc hive for artists--to some degree, the Margie mythology "piggybacks" off all of that. But, no matter.)

In the latter case, we're dealing with something that *was* officially deemed "heritage" once Context entered the picture--it was listed back in 1973 (though never designated)--and aside from the loss of the Silver Rail (I'm reserving judgment on that one), Context only addressed the obvious "reasons for listing" stuff: external envelope, ground-floor lobby, etc. Pro forma, but in the best way possible (luckily enough, there are firms like E.R.A. capable of making the most of heritage lip service out there). The result was a "splendidly restored" envelope and all, bringing a neglected landmark into the present, bla bla...but it was only skin deep. Only "as much as necessary". And as a result, the kinds of magical internal contents which a Margie Zeidler would have respected and made a "selling point"...were trashed. Because they were "unrecognized". (You have to remember that listing/designation has often beeh hampered by either the values of a moment--back in the 70s, interiors and other such subtleties weren't typically "recognized"--or by the whims of whatever shoulder-tugging municipal or outside parties endorsing the listing, designation, et al.)

In this case, in terms of 2012-grade raw heritage values, this isn't apples and oranges, nor is it a straw man argument. Viewed through a heritage-positive prism, one approach is clearly superior to the other. And if you seek to argue otherwise through various bits of slippery-slope or apples-and-oranges logic...you don't get it.

But re the "gender issue": I do feel there's something subliminally "gendered" about it all...it's no accident that historically, so many thoughtful defenders-of and configurers-of and reflectors-upon and arguers-for existing built form and existing conditions have been female. Architecture (and a lot of other artistic creation) has historically been a pretty virile and male-centric realm. Other than a few mavericks, women long played a subservient role--sort of like picking up and cleaning up after the men. Yet through that, they developed an oddly sensuous, even creatively possessive or devastatingly critical worm's eye upon that which surrounded them. Remember how the preservation movement was long (and often contemptuously) characterized as a "little old lady" pursuit...and there was a point there. Consider, in the 60s/70s/80s, Jane Jacobs, or Ada Louise Huxtable, or Phyllis Lambert--maybe not all having the same values (or the same hypothetical stance re a Gehry-Mirvish or what it's proposed to replace). And, etc etc...and somehow, intuitively, Margie Zeidler's approach to 401 Richmond falls into this "gendered" lineage, too. (And if I may be magazine-article-profiler for a second, she may not be girly-girl, but I'd characterize her more as earth-motherly--indeed, that persona imbues all her projects.)

Now, I don't feel we should put everything in one side of a gendered pot--however, when it comes to urbanity, what I'd characterize as that "female way" IMO has always been a necessary corrective, an equilibrium-setter. (Likewise, Spacing-style urbanism has always been multigendered--and as such, truly a product of a generation where the gender divides of old no longer pertain. It's "blended".) The principle of "proceed cautiously" is multigendered; subjecting everything to "proceed boldly" is about as female as Ayn Rand.....
 
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The case for heritage preservation here is somewhat overwrought, despite the listings which as we know are fairly toothless. Jacobs-style urbanism makes a far better case for this block than even the loss of the POW (which would be a far greater loss than the warehouses, 'Architecture' aside)... In the end, the sum is greater than the parts which is sort of the whole point.
 
Thanks adma. Nice analysis.

And if things sometimes seem skewed the other direction: remember that the nature of the UT forum beast has been historically overwhelmingly male--weren't there threads along the lines of "where are the women in Urban Toronto", once upon a time? Things haven't really changed much since; I guess we've kind of resigned ourselves to the fact (Interweb discussion groups have always been a little nerdy-boy by nature)--but sometimes, when grappling with the democratic nature of urbanity (heritage or not), a little oxygen laced w/estrogen helps to clarify the bigger picture.

Come to think of it: in that particular thread of thought, the Princess of Wales Theatre almost winds up imbued with its equally ill-starred (and, perhaps to pro-Gehry detractors, equally vacuous) namesake--almost like this is the moment when we ought to cue up "Candle In The Wind", or something...
 
Thanks adma. Nice analysis

Of what?

Certainly nothing resembling the topic. I'll tell you one thing though....if Red Herring was an Olympic sport, he would be on the podium.


Under the circumstances: dignity, schmignity--sometimes, it takes a jester, a fool, to frame and highlight the truth.

Under what circumstances??? Since you don't have enough information to glean any truth from, I'm gonna have to agree with the fool part.



Maybe not as "condensed" as you'd like, but read the rest of the paragraph you snipped from, re "proceed cautiously". It's absolutely relevant, in a way that condenses and mediates among all sides.

What makes you think I arrived at my opinion lightly or hastily? Are you claiming that having a definitive opinion and being cautious are mutually exclusive?

I don't believe you really care anyway.... despite your claim of being an anarchist, I think it more likely you are simply a contrarian.

And beyond that: yeah, the problem may be in how Toronto handles its heritage/listing/designation process, which leads to all these tripwires. However, even there, I reckon said warehouses would be deemed inherently valid as heritage properties anywhere.

That would suggest that context has nothing to do with it, which is of course ridiculous.
No one is denying these are "heritage" buildings. But all that says is that this is a building we have inherited from the past, which in and of itself is of little importance. If this were all that matters, then I don't want to be around 50 years from now when we are having this same argument over strip malls in Scarborough.

The warehouses in question have contextual value because they are in a larger district that is full of similar industrial warehouse buildings. I think it is important to preserve this context as much as possible, as some (not all) of these buildings not only look attractive, but provide the type of urban streetwall you don't often find in Toronto.

BUT....these buildings front a section of King Street where they are in contrast with the general context. I don't know if their particular design suited their original purposes very well, but as 21st century King Street commercial frontage, they fail miserably. Even a complete restoration to their original state would not change this. And the status quo is hardly worth defending...it's a great location, but still fails to attract interesting tenants to these awkward, whitewashed throwbacks to 70's kitsch. I had this conscious opinion long before this project came along.


And if you disagree, it's a reason why your sort tends not to be on heritage bodies, as opposed to deputing against them. Like, within such a realm, you'd be received as the equivalent of someone arguing against affirmative action because "its job is done: time to move on".

Did I not already demand that you stop with these absurd characterizations of me, that can clearly not be made based on the single incident of my opinion of these warehouses. Good God...you're now deducing my opinion on affirmative action based on it. Only the lowliest of dishonest toads would stoop to so many fallacious arguments. I thought Jerry Falwell was dead.
 
And if things sometimes seem skewed the other direction: remember that the nature of the UT forum beast has been historically overwhelmingly male--weren't there threads along the lines of "where are the women in Urban Toronto", once upon a time? Things haven't really changed much since; I guess we've kind of resigned ourselves to the fact (Interweb discussion groups have always been a little nerdy-boy by nature)--but sometimes, when grappling with the democratic nature of urbanity (heritage or not), a little oxygen laced w/estrogen helps to clarify the bigger picture.

Come to think of it: in that particular thread of thought, the Princess of Wales Theatre almost winds up imbued with its equally ill-starred (and, perhaps to pro-Gehry detractors, equally vacuous) namesake--almost like this is the moment when we ought to cue up "Candle In The Wind", or something...

Oh yes. Although, in a different medium (evening community meetings) the demographic definitely skews 65+ female, almost a direct opposite to UT.

As always, the answers lie somewhere in the middle.
 
And if things sometimes seem skewed the other direction: remember that the nature of the UT forum beast has been historically overwhelmingly male--weren't there threads along the lines of "where are the women in Urban Toronto", once upon a time? Things haven't really changed much since; I guess we've kind of resigned ourselves to the fact (Interweb discussion groups have always been a little nerdy-boy by nature)--but sometimes, when grappling with the democratic nature of urbanity (heritage or not), a little oxygen laced w/estrogen helps to clarify the bigger picture.

I'd agree a large majority of UT forumers are male, but within that group there is a significant male gay demographic which introduces more balance, or respect for the arts, community, and so forth. This is good. In other words we dont suffer from having an insufficient number of females. Is this coming out right?
 
I don't believe you really care anyway.... despite your claim of being an anarchist, I think it more likely you are simply a contrarian.

Not that that's bad or anything. After all, once upon a time, the heritage movement in general might have been dismissed as "contrarianism". As would concepts like affirmative action, feminism, gay rights, and what have you. Or most any form of artistic modernism.

Maybe you're just too constipatedly straight for your own good. (Sort of in a 60s straights-vs-hippies/freaks/weirdos sense--and, hey; those early hippies were pioneers in embracing heritage/vintage/retro-type stuff. Right?)


No one is denying these are "heritage" buildings. But all that says is that this is a building we have inherited from the past, which in and of itself is of little importance. If this were all that matters, then I don't want to be around 50 years from now when we are having this same argument over strip malls in Scarborough.

What kind of rock have you been living under? Thanks to this project among others paving the way, and as affirmed by stuff like this, all I can say is--don't let the door hit you on the way out.

Such is the marvel of evolving definitions of latent heritage (or heritage-esque) worth. For your "strip malls in Scarborough", one can substitute "commie blocks" or "brutalist bunkers"--and while it may be distressing to detractors (many of whom fancy themselves as "friends of heritage"), even they have their heritage-minded defenders today. Never mind 50 years from now.

Sorry, kiddo; you're skunked.


The warehouses in question have contextual value because they are in a larger district that is full of similar industrial warehouse buildings. I think it is important to preserve this context as much as possible, as some (not all) of these buildings not only look attractive, but provide the type of urban streetwall you don't often find in Toronto.

BUT....these buildings front a section of King Street where they are in contrast with the general context. I don't know if their particular design suited their original purposes very well, but as 21st century King Street commercial frontage, they fail miserably. Even a complete restoration to their original state would not change this. And the status quo is hardly worth defending...it's a great location, but still fails to attract interesting tenants to these awkward, whitewashed throwbacks to 70's kitsch. I had this conscious opinion long before this project came along.

If it were about your trumped-up "in contrast with the general context", then your condemnation of this frontage might as well telescope to the similar-vintage stuff on the other side of the Royal Alex, or Front W of University, or, for that matter, retroactively re the Pretzel Bell. And then you'd really rile up the heritage community.

Besides, the "fails to attract interesting tenants" may be more a failure of landlordship (sorry, Mirvish), combined with a touch of tourist-district-itis (sorry again, Mirvish--if a little more reflexively, in a "Mirvish you ho this is all your fault" way), than a failure of building stock. And above all, you're not attacking Edwardian warehouses--you're attacking 70s kitsch (again, I suppose, "Mirvish you ho this is all your fault"). Unless you're more broadly attacking the embrace of Edwardian warehouses as a 70s kitsch concept--heck, if that's how it is, you might as well condemn heritage in general. Y'know, "nostalgia" as a negative metaphor. And maybe raise the Ford family's purchase-at-auction of a big cache of Mirvish restaurant decoration to prove your point about the frontage, i.e. it's macabre in the same way the Ford Fest spread on Weston Wood is macabre (hey, hyperbole is fun;-))

And beyond all that, there's a fair argument to be made that thanks to its provenance (Diamond & Myers, etc) Eclipse Whitewear actually contradicts the "kitsch" pigeonhole of 70s "heritage culture"--that is, it's far more of a landmark of incipient Crombie-era "urban progressivism", i.e. that which prefigures 401 Richmond, et al.

Sure, you may have had a "conscious opinion"--but let me counter-offer that I had my own early conscious opinion that the Distillery District could be viewed as an awkward throwback to 00's kitsch, Balzac's and all (throwback to the present?). First time I went there, it felt like a tableau out of a Simpsons episode, if you get my drift. As the bearer of a jaundiced eye t/w so-called heritage-based kitsch, I suppose I'm way ahead of you, then...so ahead of you, I'm willing to come back around and embrace it "in spite of itself", perhaps.

Did I not already demand that you stop with these absurd characterizations of me, that can clearly not be made based on the single incident of my opinion of these warehouses. Good God...you're now deducing my opinion on affirmative action based on it. Only the lowliest of dishonest toads would stoop to so many fallacious arguments. I thought Jerry Falwell was dead.

I'm not "deducing your opinion". I'm illuminating by way of metaphor. And really: such is my point--your constipated perspective on heritage in general would be about as well received in today's advanced heritage-minded circles as a "its job is done/time to move on" POV would be relative to affirmative action. And in the latter case, peering between the lines of the code language, I *could* see what might motivate a time-to-move-on reflex--i.e. overwrought acts and politically-correct excesses and little bits of corruption that might make a travesty of a good thing. Affirmative action's version of silly-indiscriminate-NIMBYism and "Lyle Studio" facadism and Prince Charles-ian reactivism, so to speak.

That is, there could be a perfectly fair and valid argument for Gehry/Mirvish replacing the present block. But it'd be out of this being an extraordinarily exceptional circumstance--OTOH the "I'd rip them down for much less" crowd is the sort that insults the whole argument, i.e. the embrace of Gehry/Mirvish as code language for a more generically obtuse if not hostile perspective on where heritage is at in 2012. A little like how the ooh! aah! cable-stayed spectacularity of the Toronto Viaduct project is a coded front for those James Alcock types with an eternal axe to grind re what Stop The Spadina hath wrought...
 
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I'd agree a large majority of UT forumers are male, but within that group there is a significant male gay demographic which introduces more balance, or respect for the arts, community, and so forth. This is good. In other words we dont suffer from having an insufficient number of females. Is this coming out right?

Correct enough--which may be why the "where's the female forumers?" question hasn't really alighted for some time now: it's quasi-redundant.

Better a forum w/lotsa gays than a ghetto of latent homosexuals (i.e. the Usenet-style Libertrollian circle-jerking of yore)

Oh, and incidentally, re my Princess of Wales metaphor: let's not all forget that that was Toronto's official bouquet-gathering pilgrimage spot after Di died in '97...
 

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