ksun
Senior Member
yet the industries were there first, then the residential apartments were built decades later
The industries were first at queen and John or bay and front too, should they all stay?
|
|
|
yet the industries were there first, then the residential apartments were built decades later
I've always rather liked the Redpath Refinery and its reminder of Toronto harbour's industrial past. I see no reason why it should have to relocate. It is neither smelly nor disgusting unless one considers honest hard work to be smelly and disgusting.
Last year in Havana, I met a man who had worked a few years ago on one of the sugar boats that supplied Redpath. He was quite dazzled by Toronto.
There are a couple of equally ugly factories not far away on the east along the lake to remind you the beautiful industrial past too. You mean the factory itself is not ugly? Maybe we should have more of theses downtown, how about university and king?
The industries were first at queen and John or bay and front too, should they all stay?
Their turned this former candy factory into lofts, at Queen West & Shaw. Guess someone didn't like them making candy. (Which uses sugar.)
No matter how some people justify it (jobs downtown etc), a sugar refinery sitting by our prime waterfront is a huge waste of space. It looks extremely hideous and takes too much space (2 city blocks?). Whoever thinks it is fine the way it's is just kidding himself. I'd rather have a giant parking lot than this smelly disgusting monolith.
It looks beautiful. And the smell is heavenly. And it's great to walk past and see the sugar being offloaded.No matter how some people justify it (jobs downtown etc), a sugar refinery sitting by our prime waterfront is a huge waste of space. It looks extremely hideous and takes too much space (2 city blocks?). Whoever thinks it is fine the way it's is just kidding himself. I'd rather have a giant parking lot than this smelly disgusting monolith.
The trade embargo is still in place for the most part. Congress has to end that. What happened today is the return to full diplomatic relations and easier travel from the US to Cuba.
The industries were first at queen and John or bay and front too, should they all stay?
I love seeing the big boats come in and I love the smell. ksun is a fool.
This is my understanding...
The Redpath Refinery is owned by American Sugar Refining Inc. (an American company, if it wasn't obvious, so they weren't allowed to do business with Cuba anyway). The US sugar market is heavily protected though the form of heavy tariffs on foreign imports and quotas. If there is a sugar shortage in the US and tariffs or quotas are relaxed, ASR has the ability to quickly import refined sugar into the USA through their strategically located refinery in Toronto.
Redpath's importance to its owner means that it's not likely to be going anywhere soon.
(Again, just my understanding of the situation.)
The industries were first at queen and John or bay and front too, should they all stay?
I've always rather liked the Redpath Refinery and its reminder of Toronto harbour's industrial past. I see no reason why it should have to relocate. It is neither smelly nor disgusting unless one considers honest hard work to be smelly and disgusting.
Last year in Havana, I met a man who had worked a few years ago on one of the sugar boats that supplied Redpath. He was quite dazzled by Toronto.