UrbanAffair
Senior Member
So many variables to consider when looking at why cities like Toronto aren't building supertalls, and cities like New York are. Size, land constraints, harbour cities vs great lake cities, highest and best use (physically possible, economically feasible, legally feasible, maximally productive), economic size of the country as a whole, infrastructure and transit availability, etc, etc... Simply following that other cities, like San Fran and NYC have/are getting SOOOOOOpertalls and thinking Toronto should too, is such a basic analysis of the situation here, and falls in line, at least in my opinion, with overextending thinking, uninformed thinking and thinking in general that often can result in a negative consequences, if economic conditions dramatically change. Personally, I am impulsive sometimes...well often...but I sure wouldn't be with a decision of the magnatude of lets build a 1400ft'er. Sure zoning is part of it, but only a small part in reality when looking at highest and best use, and I think the city would definitly consider an iconic building that is a supertall if proposed when all the other factors fall in line. There will always be land to be redeveloped. We should be very very ecstatic with the mass amount of growth the core in general is/has and will be receiving in the next while. After all, 10 years ago most proposals were much smaller and few and far between. As land decreases, height will increase generally. If we stopped building towers outside of the core, (kind of like Chicago) Im sure there would be many buildings of supertall height in the core. Personally I like our layout a bit better.