someMidTowner
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Sept 5th:
D+S never got that cultural memo: Curvy staircases belong in Mtl.
21 September 2012: What a ghastly beast this building is! For example:
D+S never got that cultural memo: Curvy staircases belong in Mtl.
urbandreamer is as much entitled to his/her tastes as any of us, although a vociferous dislike of this building of all buildings means he/she's verging on self-parody.urbandreamer, what does this mean?
are you happy for the architecture in Toronto to remain unadventurous?
do you like straight lines only?
are you from Mtl?
expand please, your comments do not form a full critique, they seem only to be full of anger and snide asides.
As for the muted glass tones? Yeah that's totally UHN green uniform approved!
urbandreamer is as much entitled to his/her tastes as any of us, although a vociferous dislike of this building of all buildings means he/she's verging on self-parody.
I hope it's fair to say that in general urbandreamer could classifiable as a quote-unquote "Toronto style" fundamentalist: loves modernist glass in simple rectilinear forms (not at all alone in that opinion), and on top of that has a fairly naArrow definition of which buildings quaAlify for membership in good standing in that "Toronto style" category versus others that cannot demonstrate the appropriately sacred apostolic succession from Mies/Pei/Stone/etc. Read this recent piece by William Thorsell, think the exact opposite, and you're more or less in his/her head.
Anyway, the great glass box wars occur here at a pretty good clip and there's no use having another one. Where I get a little astounded is this insistence that only buildings adhering to this Toronto-style design language, however widely or narrowly defined, "belong" here. Shangri-La has been derided as "Vancouver style" and thus a blight on our fair burgh's architectural purity for the crime of some disjointed crypto-pomo whimsy involving its base and facade articulation. Now SickKids has curves, thus is "Montreal style", and ought not to be here either.
I much prefer to live in a city and not a centrally-planned theme park. Juxtaposition of architectural styles is a good thing, no matter how great the single most dominant style is. This sort of purity obsession gets increasingly ridiculous when you realize how tenuous minimalist modernism's claim for being a naturally Torontonian concept is. Unlike other large North American cities that have skylines built gradually through many architectural eras, Toronto's tone-setting skyscraper boom happened in a relatively narrow time window in the late 60s and 70s fuelled by the collapse of anglo Montreal, and so we got a handful of bank towers that snapshotted the trends of the time. I take no pleasure with agreeing with Conrad Black on this, but those were basically clones--very good clones--of other work by Mies, Pei and Stone from around that same period. The idea that a box is quintessentially Torontonian really does have its roots in historical fluke. And the idea that every other building in this city must match them perfectly or be a failure? Yikes.