Pier 27 Presentation Gallery
Have you been to the new Sales Office? Here's CH's take on it:
Jun 27, 2008 04:30 AM Christopher Hume
With a showroom like this, who cares about the condo?
Long before Pier 27, the new residential complex at the foot of Yonge St., is even a hole in the ground, people are fantasizing about moving to the site.
The object of their lust is a sales centre â€" in this case, a marvellous glass box held up by steel beams. It sits on the south side of Queens Quay just east of Yonge. Surrounded by waterside parking lots, the showroom has been months and millions of dollars in the making. Though there's little doubt Pier 27 would have sold out anyway, this lovely pavilion has been erected.
Clearly, it serves some imperative other than that of straightforward marketing. The units could have been bought in a wooden hut for all the difference it makes, but in Toronto, the meaning of the sales centre goes beyond sales.
In its own way, the showroom has become a declaration of intent; it is a sign of what lies ahead. It sets the tone, announces the developer's seriousness and good taste, or, for that matter, bad taste.
Real estate analyst Barry Lyon calls the sales centre a "confidence builder."
If we can build this, it says, we can certainly build a condo you'd want to live in. Maybe, maybe not, but in the meantime some of the most engaging architectural projects in Toronto are these showrooms. Though one can't help but feel they bear little relationship to what finally appears, they're a bigger part of the process than ever.
Everyone knows you don't judge a condo by its showroom, but who cares? Does anyone remember the condo for which Will Alsop designed the showroom across from the Drake Hotel on Queen West? That's the multicoloured structure with a big glass front and the kidney-shaped windows.
It will eventually become an art gallery, which seems entirely appropriate.
On Queens Quay, there are no plans to retain the centre, though it's probably at least as interesting as whatever will replace it.
Unlike most such structures, this one suggests possibilities that some people might otherwise find hard to imagine. Above all, it offers a glimpse into what this area might feel like domesticated. The height and general mediocrity of development on Queens Quay west of Yonge has made people cynical about the neighbourhood. In Toronto, waterfront revitalization is on its way to becoming an oxymoron.
And indeed, the sales pavilion occupies land that the city almost managed to buy a few years ago but failed. Civic and federal politicians lost their nerve at the last minute and what could â€" and should â€" have been a major addition to the public realm ended up as private property. This was a huge loss to the waterfront and the city, but hardly surprising given the quality of leadership.
Expectations have been slimmed down accordingly, and thus it is that the only surprise so far on the waterfront has been the appearance of the sales centre. It seemed to come out of nowhere and create a sense of somewhere. If nothing else, it reminds city watchers of how small things can have big effects. It also hints at how Queens Quay could be transformed by the addition of trees and landscaping. This is supposed to happen under the Central Waterfront Plan, but that awaits realization.
Until then, the showroom will remain one of the most engaging projects on the lakeshore. If the Corus building down the road were half as compelling, we'd be off to an exciting start. But it isn't, and we're not.
Christopher Hume can be reached at
chume@thestar.ca