Armour
Senior Member
Hopefully the crisis-cross pattern will still be added to the mechanical box. That will provide some much needed texture and visual interest.
Much of the building is underwhelming, and the box is forgettable. It looks good because it's shiny and new, but there's nothing of interest on the facade.
It's not good looking because it's shiny and new, it's the beauty of the utter simplicity of this building which many on UT appreciate. Obviously it does not register for everyone.
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I'm sure if it didn't have shiny glass cladding, it would be about as appreciated as a run-of-the-mill 1970s apartment tower in Scarborough.
Subtle, highly-refined detailing and excellent materials aren't enough to achieve 'appreciation'? It has to do backflips to be 'interesting'?
I don't see the "highly-refined detailing". The developer needed to cover the concrete frame to shelter the units, so they applied a standard curtain wall product. They wanted balconies, so the architects added on some straight slabs and used standard translucent railings.
By contrast, nearby towers like Shangri-La and Theatre Park have distinctive details that are architectural--design features beyond the basic cladding.
The cladding is merely a product used to achieve the building's practical purpose. The architects don't design it. It's like saying you want a red brick house and going to a few brickyards to find the right kind of brick. (You might order from somewhere else or custom make the brick if you can't find anything suitable.) That's rudimentary design, but you're hardly creating something architectural on that work alone.
With every post in this thread, you reveal greater depths of ignorance of architecture.