MetroMan
Senior Member
For reference, this is what the Torch’s media tower was supposed to look like:
Not only is Dundas Square itself a mess but everything around it is a mess too! You can't look in any direction without seeing an eyesore or unnecessary clutter from HVAC units at Rogers, to video towers that look unfinished. The city just keeps piling on one mistake after another, starting with that horrible stage which looks more like it belongs in the Portlands moving cargo, than in a public square. It's a terrible place for holding shows anyway! They need to replace that stage as soon as possible.Metropolis didn't actually start off as a Disney Theme Park - Disney was not part of the original vision, and came after the approvals were in place. But the development was certainly delayed for a long time, and other tenants were lost, while PenEquity chased after the Disney Quest concept.
The Olympic Torch was another grand idea for the square, but it was never thought through, and the implementation was done on the cheap.
The only positive is that 10 Dundas and City-TV are both cheaply constructed and on valuable land. As @Filip points out, they will probably both eventually be redeveloped.
Right now the biggest problem is the mess the City itself has made in the actual square.
What's the reason to avoid it? It may not be pretty… but big deal if it's on the route between where you're coming from and where you're going to?
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Eyesore, clutter, mess, mistake piled on mistake...these qualities are hardly unique to YDS. You could say the same thing about 99 percent of Toronto’s private architecture and public realm. For that matter, a lot of people seem to think that our shabby, broken public realm is the mark of a hip, gritty urbanity and sophistication. I think the whole city is just sad, embarrassing and depressing, but I suspect I’m in the minority. I agree with everything in TV’s post; however, the midst of all Toronto’s ugliness, at least YDS has the virtue of being somewhat alive.Not only is Dundas Square itself a mess but everything around it is a mess too! You can't look in any direction without seeing an eyesore or unnecessary clutter from HVAC units at Rogers, to video towers that look unfinished. The city just keeps piling on one mistake after another, starting with that horrible stage which looks more like it belongs in the Portlands moving cargo, than in a public square. It's a terrible place for holding shows anyway! They need to replace that stage as soon as possible.
Ok Adjei, you’ve made the classic schoolboy - or schoolgirl as the case may be - error of going to a first world city outside North America, noting how the grown ups do it, then returning to Toronto and realizing how shabby and sad almost all the public realm is here. Therein lies depression, my friend. I travelled extensively outside Canada for work for almost thirty years, and every time I returned to Toronto my heart sank a bit at the aggressive, unrelenting ugliness and dysfunction. Just accept that Toronto will never have a decent, attractive, functional public realm, be grateful for the parts of your life that have nothing to do with the city itself, and spend as much time as you can in better places. I’m not being facetious or sarcastic - this is the only way I can reconcile myself to having constructed a life here without feeling regret. Because Toronto will never be anything other than what it is, except more so.
Yep...this third-world Canada we live in...
Eyeroll at the drama. Get a grip.
I haven't visited Melbourne, Sydney, or *Auckland, but I can speak to Chicago as I lived there for two years. Try straying off Michigan Avenue and then come talk to me about quality of infrastructure and architecture (not to mention, life).
Also astounding that you deride the lack of greenspace in one the greenest cities in the world.
Don't get me wrong, there is also much on my wishlist of things that should be fixed in this city (overhead wires are yucky, could do without some of the spandrel, hate driving over those potholes), but there is so much more proposed and underway in this city that is worth celebrating (especially on the architecture, parkland fronts). As long as I've known it YD Square has never come close to attractive, and as far as I'm concerned, covering/distracting from much of the terrible (Metropolis) architecture in the square is fine by me (albeit, as Towered so aptly put it, "soul-sucking"-ly corporate).
Lots of cities have the temperature fluctuations that we have but still have a better public realm. Better designed squares, lack of overhead wires on wooden poles, better sidewalks, less driving-oriented, etc. Freezing temperatures are hard on pavement of course, that's not unique to Toronto and it's no excuse for how shabby most of Toronto's public realm is. The design faults of Dundas Square have nothing to do with temperature.There are reasons Toronto is consistently considered one of the most liveable cities in the world. It does not just think about the aesthetic or what the tourists will think; it’s understood that a city first and foremost provides sustainable services to its residents.
A couple other things to consider without spending too much time on this - most world-class cities don’t have the extreme temperature fluctuations Toronto does, leading to potholes and roads appearing to be of poor quality. NYC has not yet figured it out either. Secondly, you mentioned Chicago. Chicago is $36 billion (USD) in debt after funding their infrastructure, parks, etc and there are huge concerns over its future ability to service that debt. Toronto by law cannot run an operational deficit.