gabe
Senior Member
It's been said before and i will say it again. It completely undermines the project to slap on some gutted facade and pretend it's heritage preservation.
Lots of people here support heritage preservation. If Mirvish and Gehry don't get their way to build the project in its current iteration, I doubt that anyone will consider demolishing these buildings. To see Mirvish and Gehry fail to destroy these heritage buildings with their ambitious proposal would not motivate developers to propose demolishing them for second-rate developments. When we keep the heritage laws strong, these destructive development proposals subside. When the heritage laws were created in the 1970s, the practice of buying up entire city blocks with many historic buildings and then levelling the blocks for a single modern project declined considerably. Then came a flurry of heritage restoration projects in the 1970s-1980s.
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A lot of developers will see the Mirvish-Gehry proposal is a way to test the waters to see if you can override various legitimate planning regulations and laws by bundling flashy architecture and some extra public amenities. The second-rate developers won't get Gehry to design their buildings; they'll just give P+S a better budget, and they'll get approvals because this development will set the precedent that heritage can be disregarded if you're proposing unique architecture.
But isn't that the point? To ensure that if the city is losing something, as will happen from time to time in a vital city, that it gets back more than it lost? In this case losing some designated properties but insisting on (exceptional) public amentities and exceptional architecure? City Council can say 'no' any time it wants if the trade-off isnt attractive.
With all due respect junction, it's pretty naïve to believe that this block will not be developed. If sold, the cost of the land is far greater than what the existing structures can return on investment. I am confident that there will be some sort of façade treatment here by Mirvish. Make no mistake about it though, these buildings will not exist in their current form. There is precedent set with facadectomy's throughout the city, so there is absolutely nothing the city can do about saving these buildings, as long as the developer retains the facades.
Say goodbye to this block, its days are numbered....
In this case, it's not an either-or situation like you so deliciously like to compare this to, but a request that the plans be tweaked so that this can be a win-win situation.
Wha? Those buildings are already designated:
http://www.toronto.ca/involved/statutorynotices/archive2010/sept/hl_092710_3.htm
So much for your imaginary ploy. I'd also note that that link outlines the history of the buildings which is both interesting and substantive.
think that planning staff would be so blown away by the proposal.
It's hard to believe that planning staff are blown away by all the crappy building proposals I've seen them approve.
^Good, informative post. Unfortunately the superfans of this proposal won't accept the logic.
^Good, informative post. Unfortunately the superfans of this proposal won't accept the logic.