FNTS
Active Member
I had such high hopes for this neighbourhood, but it's a sad, sad, place. It's like they looked to British public housing projects of the 20th Century for inspiration. I'm so glad I didn't buy here.
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This batch focuses in on the George Brown College building by architectsAlliance, and the TCHC buildings by Daoust Lestage of Montreal.
These shots (and the other recent inside-the-fence shots of recent posts including those in the Canary Park and Canary District threads) were taken when we sat down with Ken Tanenbaum of the Kilmer Group, half of the DundeeKilmer development team building the Pan Am Village. We have the interview up on the front page.
42
I had such high hopes for this neighbourhood, but it's a sad, sad, place. It's like they looked to British public housing projects of the 20th Century for inspiration. I'm so glad I didn't buy here.
Torontovibe: I did not ask as I was not the person conducting the interview, but if I had been…
That's not the time to ask. You either need to have all the players in the room—developers and architects—so you can lob the question out there and give whoever's going to take responsibility the chance to explain their thinking,
or
You send the question out earlier and have the two main developers sort out with the two main architects who should get back to us on that.
There's no advantage to be had from an ambush. In this area of town more than any other, it's a serious question to be asked in a serious way. We are considering how we best want to approach this. Do we want to start by talking to Urban Design at the City to ask if the Design Review Panel has expressed concern yet or if there are rumblings? Do we want to approach architects in general who have been using gray brick (and even more so gray spandrel) and ask them about its use in both general ways and on specific projects? Is it always a design decision, or is price involved? If so, will they deflect to the developers? Will we only get answers from some architects if they're speaking anonymously?
We want thoughtful answers, whether the gray is defended or not. No ambushes.
42
Let me first say that as someone who lives in Toronto and has a vested interest in the success and vitality of this city (and cities in general), I'm very grateful that this site exists, along with all its administrators, moderators, contributors, and general members. You keep us all connected and engaged with our home in a way that simply wouldn't be possible without you. With such a meagre post count to my credit, I'll do my best to repay the favour.
But it would be foolish to assume that the people who run this site -- the people who own and are employed by this company -- don't have a vested interest in creating and maintaining amicable relationships with the architects and developers who work here. Without such relationships, we wouldn't have behind-the-scenes tours, jaw-dropping photos from atop sky-high construction sites, or very many exclusive interviews at all, really. As a professional communicator who knows his way around stakeholder and media relations, I know that 42's explanations for those softly lobbed, easily answered questions make perfect sense. Why ask about anything contentious, if only to alienate them and threaten your relationship?
So there's that. And there's also the flagrant truth that their goodwill is needed to make this site viable. Promotional opportunities abound for them; just scroll around and take a look at the ads on the page, or take a trip to the project database, unfaltering in its enthusiasm, for some reminders. Plus they get the opportunity to profile their work in self-aggrandizing interviews every now and then.
Hard-hitting journalism it ain't, folks. But at least the common folk are still afforded the liberty of speaking freely.
It sure is. I assume temporary PAG buildings are going on the two prominent empty sites at bottom left. (On Thursday they were busily removing the soil mountain from the one nearest Corktown Common and flattening it out.Now that's an amazing shot!