junctionist:
Your presumption that some Victorians were disappointed that the view up Bay Street to the slums of the area around Terauley is ludicrous.
It was meant to be ludicrous. It is a form of debating known as
Reductio ad Absurdum. As a form of argument in which a proposition is disproven by following its implications logically to an absurd consequence.
junctionist:
It's not a matter of preserving a view from an arbitrary time, but a certain narrow view that has survived many generations...The part of the vista that needs to be preserved is the shape of the landmark against open sky for accentuation, to maximize visibility .It's conceivable that the accentuation can be maintained with a building behind it that's perfectly aligned with it and whose architecture explicitly draws all attention to it. ...
Preservationists have such incredible hubris to assume that they know for a
fact that never in the future there will ever be a design of some structure behind this building that would actually improve the Vista. They have such little faith in the future that they want to lock out the possibility (for all time) that some person could come along with a great design of such beauty and vista-worthiness that they would, by act of law, bar that person from creating said masterpiece.
Now that is confidence in your opinion bordering on megalomania. To force your will upon all future generations because you know you are right.
What happened to Old City Hall when 20 Queen was built? It actually improved the view. Suddenly, in the 80's, Old City Hall and the Cenotaph were being photographed like never before: Appearing on post cards, magazines and even T-Shirts. 20 Queen is not remarkable architecture and it is neither centered perfectly to accentuate the Clock Tower, but it works. The juxtaposition of the Romanesque Revival Sandstone carvings and the mirror-like reflectivity of 20 Queen works.
Was anyone forcing the developer to design 20 Queen with this in mind? No. Was it in his mind? Who can say? But the fact that he did a good job says that there is hope for others in the future to do the same. To be a preservationist is to be a pessimist: Assuming the worst all the time.
Is there no possibility that something could be built behind Old City Hall that one day would make it the most photographed vista in North America? I like to leave my options open and hope for the best.