TheSix
Active Member
Nice to see this won't be another condo.
Yeah the City wants to tackle it alone, when all said and done we may see something in 2030?Nice to see this won't be another condo.
"Something, something too slow, something, something KWT" - AGYeah the City wants to tackle it alone, when all said and done we may see something in 2030?
Though it clearly will depend on $$$ and private fund-raising they hope to start building in 2021.Yeah the City wants to tackle it alone, when all said and done we may see something in 2030?
Brutalism has its place (where its brutality can be moderated), but Old Town is not one of them."This idea has no clear logic: It’s an expensive construction project with no obvious motive. But it does have the flavour of empire-building and consultant overreach, and a dubious understanding of how urban places actually work. It deserves to go away, quickly."
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/art...t-a-plea-to-keep-torontos-st-lawrence-centre/
Brutalism has its place (where its brutality can be moderated), but Old Town is not one of them.
This project was a mistake, a remnant of the original St. Lawrence urban renewal plans (which were wrong in themselves).
Demolish and rebuild, please.
Actually, when all is said and done, the SLC is quite low-key, even "contextual", in its urban impact (evidence of how the original urban renewal plans had been toned down by 1970). That is, the brutality *has* been moderated for the occasion--and in that light, how is it any more of a "mistake" than some of the subsequent condos et al on the same block, some of which achieve less by trying harder, so to speak?
At this point, it's but today's equivalent of 60-years-ago pro-demolition arguments that High Victorian had its place, but not in a Georgian neighbourhood.
Sorry adma, the building is second-rate brutalism at best, and is low-key in all the wrong ways. It lacks any particularly noticeable contextuality, and yet also simultaneously fails to push the dynamic forms and materiality of brutalism itself- it's perhaps telling that the back of the building is more interesting than the front. There aren't even any particularly interesting urbanistic moments or public spaces that might have allowed its users (intended and unintended) to claim and moderate the space for themselves, like at the Southbank Centre arts complex in London.
It thus falls into the valley of not only being an urbanistic dead space- but of also being utterly boring, which is worse than being ugly. And no, the buildings on the block can be quite mediocre, but even then, they're all better urbanistically (materiality is varied, street level is more forgiving, forms emphasize vertical breaks). And that's quite a low bar we're setting for ourselves- we can do better nowadays!
In the end, the St. Lawrence Theatre is still a sterilizing concrete lump that saps the vitality of the corner- a corner which perhaps summarizes the building pefectly- a squat, low mass, with a dark and uninviting non-public doorway squished against the very corner of Front and Scott- there is little civic exuberance to be found here unless one tries to reach as far as possible.
Sorry adma, the building is second-rate brutalism at best, and is low-key in all the wrong ways. It lacks any particularly noticeable contextuality, and yet also simultaneously fails to push the dynamic forms and materiality of brutalism itself- it's perhaps telling that the back of the building is more interesting than the front. There aren't even any particularly interesting urbanistic moments or public spaces that might have allowed its users (intended and unintended) to claim and moderate the space for themselves, like at the Southbank Centre arts complex in London.
It thus falls into the valley of not only being an urbanistic dead space- but of also being utterly boring, which is worse than being ugly. And no, the buildings on the block can be quite mediocre, but even then, they're all better urbanistically (materiality is varied, street level is more forgiving, forms emphasize vertical breaks). And that's quite a low bar we're setting for ourselves- we can do better nowadays!
In the end, the St. Lawrence Theatre is still a sterilizing concrete lump that saps the vitality of the corner- a corner which perhaps summarizes the building pefectly- a squat, low mass, with a dark and uninviting non-public doorway squished against the very corner of Front and Scott- there is little civic exuberance to be found here unless one tries to reach as far as possible.
Adma! Where do you get your strawmen from? You surely must be single-handedly driving business. And those Ad hominems? I must know your supply- they are of the perfect geriatric taste! Exquisitely rambly and yet completely irrelevant.Well, I'm not claiming SLC to be a masterpiece. But in labelling it "utterly boring", I'd say you're being *over*-discriminating, under the circumstance--maybe it's all embodied in the "we can do better nowadays!" Like your (professional?) vested interest is more in the "doing better nowadays" than in the preexisting conditions--and those with such vested interest tend to be much more broad in their dismissal of the preexisting, or those who defend the "faulty" preexisting. (Particularly in this day and age of facadectomies of that which really didn't need to be facadectomied.)
That is, your tone resembles that of somebody bidding to do the replacement, or a confidant of the same.
As somebody *without* any such vested interest, I see the preexisting urban environment in more nuanced warts-and-all terms. And I don't give a whoozis about those who feel threatened (professionally or otherwise) by such nuance. I'm a beholder, not a builder. (And sometimes, "better urbanistically" can be to the fault--in fact, if *anything* is by my estimation "boring", it's your "materiality is varied, street level is more forgiving, forms emphasize vertical breaks". Ho hum, yawn; just more dull urban-planner-ese.)
Honestly, both facilities are flawed. The O'Keefe in its design, if not in its exuberance, and the SLC in its stodginess (perhaps symbolizing the end of 'heroic modernism' and the increasingly apparent reality of an aging urban fabric that produced rather bunker-like buildings). But there's no reason why things must be left the way they are. Our cities change, and because a building was built to mark a particular period of time shouldn't mean that its site is perpetually off-limits. The site will always transcend the buildings on them, no matter what.But that said, I don't want to go too far in declaring SLC inexpendable--even if it and O'Keefe make for interesting cultural-facility bookends to the 1960s across from one another. In fact, its cardinal "problem", such as it may be, is that it's too modest, and (perhaps reflecting the pared-down gestation-to-execution circumstances) more the kind of thing one'd expect in London or Kitchener or St Catharines than the bustling "woild class" metropolis Toronto has become. (Though one might also claim that that "problem" is actually part of SLC's cherishable charm.
I totally disagree on the quality of the building, jje1000, and that "we can do better nowadays." (Really? Where?)
Also: This is one of about 10 sites that represent the most significant cultural building program in Canadian history. If this isn't heritage, what is?