News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 02, 2020
 9.5K     0 
News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 01, 2020
 40K     0 
News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 01, 2020
 5.4K     0 

here is another selection of shots, most of them are North York, and from a slightly later time. most look to be mid to late 60's...

women.jpg


who designed this? its pretty amazing...

northyork4.jpg

modern3.jpg


this is oddly reminiscent of a flattened Sydney Opera House:

northyork3.jpg


northyork.jpg


the late lamented Bata:

bata.jpg

bata2.jpg


i love all three of these buildings:

neilsen.jpg

modern4.jpg

modern.jpg


this development has very contemporary proportions i think, almost looks like the base of an AA development...

new3.jpg

new2.jpg


new6.jpg

new5.jpg


Men With Hats! these are definitely earlier:

newhouses.jpg

new.jpg

suburb2.jpg


back to the sunny 1960's:

northyork2.jpg


northyork5.jpg


modern2.jpg


and to cap it all off--dinner and dancing!

finedining.jpg

nightclub.jpg
 
Landlord needs an attitude correction here - this place seriously needs sprucing up.:(

It looks like they are going for demolition by neglect - so someone can build more of the faux chato-wnhouses that are across the street.

The building to the east (the one with the boys in front of it in Deepend's photos, I think) looks like it is empty.
 
boy that's really a grim transformation. its always amazing to me that something that starts off so elegant can end up looking so slummy.
i guess its a typical 'death by a thousand cuts' scenario: there are a least a dozen little things that, added together, have made the development look like total dreck...
 
Though for what it is, it actually doesn't look *that* bad--at least, compared to others of its ilk in 2009--and from the original sash and slatted sunshades on down, it's surprisingly intact, too. No awful aluminum siding or EIFS here. I find it more "shaggy" than slummy; and worthy of, uh, restoration...

Watch how you condemn its present state, you might be inadvertently encouraging a worse fate.
 
My Dad used to own this Store, Claire's Cigar store.

My family had it from 1971 to 1985. I worked cash there when I was about 10years old.

In those days everything was closed sundays except for us. I remember when cigarettes went up to 75 cents what a fuss people were making.
We sold a variety of ceramics including many versions of the Elvis Bust

plaza3.jpg
 
Last edited:
Though for what it is, it actually doesn't look *that* bad--at least, compared to others of its ilk in 2009--and from the original sash and slatted sunshades on down, it's surprisingly intact, too. No awful aluminum siding or EIFS here. I find it more "shaggy" than slummy; and worthy of, uh, restoration...

Watch how you condemn its present state, you might be inadvertently encouraging a worse fate.

ok--you're right...
its very rundown and ramshackle, but i would much rather see the development carry on with its present shambolic unravelling than have it entombed in that horrible awful EIFS!!

(who invented that stuff anyway?? its the worst building material in the history of the world.)
 
I think the beginnings of EIFS were quite legitimately idealistic, as a solution to the rebuilding of bombed European historic centres, etc.

And you have to admit, some of the "rundown and ramshackle" quality here has more to do with balcony/window accoutrements and the like, which may relate more to fiendishlibrarian's rants on everything from the sidewalk poster plague to how everyday grooming and decorum have gone down the tubes over the past few decades...
 
But at least it's kept its basic form; so, it *is* "restorable" (at least in the event that BMO moves out and maybe some appropriately Starbucks-type operation moves in)
 
It looks very forgettable now. The Scotiabank 'pavilion' fared slightly better, though it received an addition.

At least they're still standing and restorable.
 
Last edited:

Back
Top