I will now offer my comments:
One Sky by PMA:
The nicest, greenest proposal.
What I referred to initially as the bottle cap rim is the public art piece; I don't think it adds value, frankly, but its not the end of the world either.
I don't believe the lawn is likely to be sustainable, as they are encouraging people to use it, and I think the density of use to area is a problem here, equally, it may function as a desire line given the pathway arrangements.
I'm not sure about hiding the washrooms under the structural seating.
Finally, needs a drinking fountain.
*****
Electric Forest by Public City:
- Hate it. Passionately.
- The electric light-up faux trees are in directly conflict with the nature/native forest component.
- The arrangement of the landscape like an English Garden/Orchard into rows is a design that never works out well. In Toronto we've seen this before in June Callwood and in Town Square park in Yorkville.
- The people flow is completely unnatural, and it reads as a maze that's meant to look interesting from above, which is not how the vast majority will experience it. The tables/chairs being stuffed into these narrow rows between plants looks like a real accessibility challenge and not just for those with mobility impairments.
****
Wawatesi by West 8
- Appreciate the idea behind the Birch Tree grove; but White Birch are not a very urban tolerant species; on top of that, so many of any one species is a high-risk planting proposition I would recommend against.
- Not sold on the elevated structure (balcony) or its treatment.
- No drinking fountain
****
River Park by O2:
- Alleyway treatment is kinda cool.
- Way too much Canopy ; a park is meant to be outdoors.
- Way too much hardscape.
- Interlocking pavers in grey do not give the feel of an 'underground' or lost river.
- No drinking fountain
****
Nookomis by DTAH:
- In its favour, a good base idea, a drinking fountain, and the movable seating
- Against, far too much hardscape;
- Landforms for vegetation that are too fragmented and serve only to convolute one's experience of the place and impair vegetative growth.
- A lot of Birch again, and some other plant choices that are suspect. I'm all for giving different things a try, but if you rely heavily species that require great conditions and don't provide those, it probably won't work out.
*****
Not clear at this stage from any proponent:
- Is the vegetation being irrigated?
- Are soil volumes sufficient?
- Most proposals have paths that are a tad convoluted and may be subject to desire line impairment.
- would have liked to see every proposal do a 'winter view' and a 'night time' view.