wolfewood
Active Member
I appreciate that this site is focused primarily on redevelopment but I think Toronto could stand to see a slowdown in new builds in the old city so as to make buildings like this one viable and worth more than just the land they are on. Much of old Canadian cities (especially Toronto and Montreal) have been lost to crappy 60s and 70s era urban planning and so much of what is left is often treated like a placeholder for a future condo or, occasionally, office tower. Considering how much smaller Canadian city centres were historically, it bothers the hell out of me that the best we can do to preserve pre-WWII urban forms is facadicism or rotting stasis.
I mean, I don't mind a heritage structure as facade build as much as some on UT (though god knows there's some ugly ones out there) but is it really such a hardship to ask that we have one less condo and one more pre-war structure, preserved and cleaned up, as both a nice reminder of the past and as a place that can charge cheaper rent than a new build? One of the original draws people had to downtown was that it was a nice, older place (brick factories with their cheaper rents and cool loft style, old homes and commercial buildings with cheap apartments etc.) and yet we're tearing down just that for bland modernity. We don't need to reject all development but I really think the pendulum has swung so far away from preserving the benign old Toronto that we're risking losing all but the most exceptional old buildings and side street homes.
Pardon the rant, @Skeezix comments about this building just twigged something in me today.
I mean, I don't mind a heritage structure as facade build as much as some on UT (though god knows there's some ugly ones out there) but is it really such a hardship to ask that we have one less condo and one more pre-war structure, preserved and cleaned up, as both a nice reminder of the past and as a place that can charge cheaper rent than a new build? One of the original draws people had to downtown was that it was a nice, older place (brick factories with their cheaper rents and cool loft style, old homes and commercial buildings with cheap apartments etc.) and yet we're tearing down just that for bland modernity. We don't need to reject all development but I really think the pendulum has swung so far away from preserving the benign old Toronto that we're risking losing all but the most exceptional old buildings and side street homes.
Pardon the rant, @Skeezix comments about this building just twigged something in me today.