I may work in the condo sales business, but there is nothing I hate more than tearing down history to make room for a glass and steel tower. Aren't there empty lots to build on? Buildings that have no history or stylistic merit?
There was also a strip on Charles Street, just west of Bay. Gorgeous old homes, boarded up and then torn down.
IIRC, those houses were bought in the 80s with the intent to develop at that time but never materialiized when the last RE bubble occurred.Another just east of Sherbourne, south of Bloor. I know the area is still a bit sketchy, but couldn't they save the houses?
I may work in the condo sales business, but there is nothing I hate more than tearing down history to make room for a glass and steel tower. Aren't there empty lots to build on? Buildings that have no history or stylistic merit?
Remember that you're also making history by building new buildings. Who's to say what has "stylistic" merit when so many fairly generic Victorian buildings have heritage status? When buildings are built differently, the details in today's glass and steel towers like balcony and mullion placement, city-required artwork and perhaps materials will stand out more.
the owners accumulated the properties, boarded them up and let them fall apart due to neglect with the intent to re-develop.
Is that what little trinity church is doing with its heritage properties on the south side of king, just east of parliament?
Agreed. Too many people think old = good. Often times old is just old, and a fresh injection of originality is a nice kick in the pants.Remember that you're also making history by building new buildings. Who's to say what has "stylistic" merit when so many fairly generic Victorian buildings have heritage status?
One example I found to be an interesting (albeit not always ideal) compromise though was a neighbourhood (not in Toronto) which was mostly Victorian homes, and the neighbourhood planning committee declared that all new homes had to be the same style. However, there was no declaration of heritage status on any of the homes AFAIK. So, what a few people did was tear down older homes and rebuilt them from scratch, with an approved "Victorian" style externally but with all the modern building materials and amenities.
I figured that would be response, esp. amongst purists, but that particular home IMO was very tasteful. Obviously, much of the time that won't be the case, but in that particular case I personally thought it fit perfectly in an amongst the older homes.Okay, "over to me".
That is a travesty of a compromise solution. It plays to a kitschy yokelville idiot notion of "heritage". It's a fate worse than simple teardown, and it is no ideal to be embraced at all, except among his diehards.
Given that alternative, you might as well forget about any "heritage gesture" at all, except for whatever coincidentally/fortuitously emanates from elementary zoning approvals and negotiations.
But you do have a point about heritage designation being at times too "unyielding", or at least misleadingly perceived as such. The best rule of thumb to consider when it comes to a heritage home (or even one that isn't officially "heritage", if it's a matter of respecting a certain common urban decorum), is that when it comes to "preserving" or leaving well enough alone, the "public face" (i.e. the street elevation) is what's most important. Unless specified otherwise, everything behind and beyond is open to free will--at least, within reason.
It's a rule of thumb that's come into question when it comes to main-street facadectomies, old facades pasted like postage stamps upon oversized office buildings or condos. But it's just fine for residential neighbourhoods, because homeowners typically don't build 7-story monsters behind 2-storey facades: and better a real Victorian face than faux Victorian, by far...