MetroMan
Senior Member
Those signs need to go back on Yonge. Elsewhere they won't have the same effect. Their importance is linked to Yonge St. Hopefully they'll be placed in the atrium of the SLC and visible from the outside.
Those signs need to go back on Yonge. Elsewhere they won't have the same effect. Their importance is linked to Yonge St. Hopefully they'll be placed in the atrium of the SLC and visible from the outside.
For heaven's sake. Why not just throw in an historic neon "bud light" sign in there as well. I don't understand how that sign belongs anytwhere near whatever this new building is. Mabe Snohetta could have an LED facade or something that evokes the old presence bright over the top signage on Yonge, but that sign was for a record store. Not a stuudent centre. Silliness. It should go in a museum with other fetishized objects if people feel so attached to it.
For heaven's sake. Why not just throw in an historic neon "bud light" sign in there as well. I don't understand how that sign belongs anytwhere near whatever this new building is. Mabe Snohetta could have an LED facade or something that evokes the old presence bright over the top signage on Yonge, but that sign was for a record store. Not a stuudent centre. Silliness. It should go in a museum with other fetishized objects if people feel so attached to it.
It was as much a part of Yonge St as anything else. It needs to go back on Yonge. I don't care if this isn't a record store, it replaced the iconic store without attempting any facadism all, despite how iconic the signage was on the street and in the city, and they should at least honour what they replaced.
"Iconic store"? Iconic to whom? It was a grubby dump that sold things people don't buy and nobody shopped there. That's why it folded.
Zanzibar and the Brass Rail are "as much a part of Yonge Street as anything else" too... as much as I love their signage, should their facades be incorporated into the buildings that will eventually replace them? No. Of course not.
How about Future Shop, Pizza Pizza, the head shop up the street or the scientology sign? How about the countless nail salons? Should their signage be preserved? NO!
The idea that signage promoting for-profit businesses deserves to be "honoured" by an institution of higher learning is, to me, absurd.
If the sign is 'incorporated' into the new building at all, I hope it will be hung on a wall as an objet d'art, & nothing more. I certainly hope that the new building's design will not be constrained and limited by this groan-worthy stipulation.
TRUE TORONTONIANS
people who had good taste
Zanzibar is a strip club, Sam the Record Man is an iconic record store. No comparison whatsoever.
I don't care. It's true.You're really not helping yourself here.
Zanzibar is an iconic strip club. Just because Sam sold records for the "people with taste" doesn't make it iconic, and any other similarly gaudy building not so.
This entire post is ridiculous. Sam the Record Man is iconic to TRUE TORONTONIANS. And people who had good taste bought stuff there, it went out of business for the same reason that MusicWorld (which sold your definition of what people buy) did, HMV moved in and took all the business.. It had NOTHING to do with what it sold. It is the same reason why Midas takes the business of local muffler shops.
Zanzibar is a strip club, Sam the Record Man is an iconic record store. No comparison whatsoever.
These Future Shop and Pizza Pizza examples are ridiculous. They aren't even worthy of a response.
The idea of a for-profit business signage being honoured may not be realistic IF IT WERE STILL FOR-PROFIT. Keeping signage that is as much a part of Toronto and Yonge St as anything else being preserved is not absurd, your destructivist thinking is.
I think as the people tearing down the ICONIC store and sign, they should feel obligated to preserve it.
If that sign is not considered worthy of being displayed on Yonge Street, then I will officially lose hope for this city.
The Sam the Record Man spinning records were among the most famous "icons" of Toronto during the 1960s, 1970s and into the 1980s. I grew up thousands of miles from Toronto, yet I knew about that sign, it represented the entire Yonge street strip to most of Canada. I would go so far as to say that it was -- and still is -- far more well known outside Toronto than many more traditionally "cultural" images of the city, such as Casa Loma or the O'Keefe Centre.
If that sign is not considered worthy of being displayed on Yonge Street, then I will officially lose hope for this city.