Ok, don't. The Silos will be demolished and I will be proven right. Even Vaughan has come to the conclusion that nobody wants to invest money into some crumbling malting silos. I mean, you could have at least picked an example where history wasn't so clearly backing me up.
His conclusion is based more upon the shape they're in
today, and upon its really being the 11th-hour-and-three-quarters for anyone to step up and provide the investment dough, etc, and at the very least fix the critical structural problems, like, now, immediately.
It's not about "nobody wants to invest money into some crumbling malting silos"; it's about said "crumbling malting silos" now being all but beyond rescue unless some practical-minded magical jillionaire visionary steps in,
fast.
Otherwise, prove to me that Adam Vaughan's change of heart extends to something more retrospective, i.e. "maybe we shouldn't have tried saving them in the first place", etc. My hunch is that in principle, he'd probably
still fight your kind of "less sex appeal for the general public than aggregate yards" heritage-philistine judgment--
and, perhaps, use the impending loss of Canada Malting as a motivator for such a fight. (IOW as is often the case in heritage fights, Penn Station et al, it died so others could survive.)
Note, too, that my own approach to this current Canada Malting state of affairs is (surprisingly?) fatalistic, i.e. it was a terrific opportunity for visionary thinking and the encouragement thereof to follow through into built form, but maybe sometimes time and luck runs out. Probably not unlike Vaughan's POV, in fact.
Buildings, like those in the DD, can be fairly easily converted into things that yuppies are willing to pay for (like places to drink, or pretend to care about art), whereas the Malting Silos can't.
It's not random chance, anybody who looks at buildings like the Malting Silos critically are able to see they are totally unsuitable to conversion, while buildings like old generating stations (Hearn, Battersea, Bankside) are very suitable for conversion. People don't like living in circles 6m in diameter with no windows or ventilation.
Who said anything about yuppification or "living in" being the optimum here? As with some of the proposals that have been offered over time for Canada Malting and its like, maybe storage facilities are better adapted as a different kind of "storage facility" (archives, et al).
Indeed, there's a certain
pro-heritage POV that'd share your disdain for the Distillery District's yuppification--albeit from the other end; that it trivializes what it's meant to celebrate. (Maybe less to condemn what happened here, than as a lesson for the future. Never judge the heritage book by its cover, IOW.)
p.s. If there is an example of a subculture more worthy of fringe designation than hardcore urban explorers, I have yet to hear of them.
You seem to forget that fringey subculture can have sex appeal
Maybe that's what inspires people to get into getting passionate about old architectural wrecks...