adma
Superstar
That's just the point: In its current context the HC building will never be the catalyst for the type of improvements or changes that one would envisage in order to improve its fate. On the contrary, as the city grows around it the pressure to develop this low-density site will only increase... and who would raise much of a fuss on behalf of what is largely an overlooked, out of the way building that has little relevance to anybody but heritage geeks?
Except...as of now, we aren't dealing with a Yonge + Gould demolition-by-neglect situation, or even a 90 Harbour mothball situation. In fact, you're overstating the THC's overlooked/out-of-the-way/neglectedness; or even the likelihood that it'll vanish or be fatally compromised through development pressures if maintained in situ. (Heck, in situ, I'd argue it's more of a creative opportunity than an impediment.)
Look at it this way: if you question "who would raise much of a fuss", you're listening too much to glassy-eyed message-boarding skyscraper/development geeks who adore Hong Kong/Shanghai-type out-with-the-old/in-with-the-new superscraper determination; or to newspaper blog commenters who'd long for a clearcutting of eyesore Victorian Yonge St. But as situations like Yonge + Gould actually prove, there's a little innate "heritage geekness" in all of us--even if suppressed until the 11th or even 12th hour.
That said, I'm not arguing that I hate the building where it is so much as I don't hate the idea of moving it either. A relocation to a waterfront site becomes part of the building's history/evolution as it reclaims what truly is its original location in terms of context. At a more prominent site it stands a far better chance of being embraced and appreciated by a larger public who will go on to see it with far greater perspective than before.
Sorry, Tewder, but from a heritage-awareness/sensitivity standpoint, that's insipid dreck. And it's all the more reason to keep in situ, as a living organism within a larger whole, and instead work upon conditioning said "larger public" away from easy insipid-dreck heritage panaceas.
Remember that half a decade ago, people like Councillor Milczyn were arguing for the removal of the NPS walkways with a similar "it stands a far better chance of being embraced and appreciated by a larger public who will go on to see it with far greater perspective than before" alibi on behalf of New City Hall. Luckily, that insipid-dreck viewpoint of inevitability was quickly checked, euphemistic "larger public" be darned...