Aaron_Lloyd
Active Member
Give it ten years and it will develop a nice patina of dust and grime just like Omega, don't worry!Well…at least it’s not grey or beige?
Give it ten years and it will develop a nice patina of dust and grime just like Omega, don't worry!Well…at least it’s not grey or beige?
Thank you! Some sensibility here.Does it provide housing for a lot of people?
Is it located near transit?
This project checks all the boxes for me.
This is why I hear "Deadmonton" quite often.Thank you! Some sensibility here. Quit complaining about the aesthetics of the building and look at what it's providing to the city.
Honestly, I've never heard anyone say that because of how our skyline looks. On the flip side, that's pretty much how people define Edmonton from a street level perspe, which hopefully these buildings are going to contribute significantly in changing.This is why I hear "Deadmonton" quite often.
Imagine the density we could get around transit stations if we just legalize slums!
I don't think its some horrible thing to want the city to use a modicum of its leverage to impose a higher standard of design and aesthetics on developers like Langham who'll always be looking to save a buck by shortchanging the city on curb appeal.
Imagine the density we could get around transit stations if we just legalize slums!
I don't think its some horrible thing to want the city to use a modicum of its leverage to impose a higher standard of design and aesthetics on developers like Langham who'll always be looking to save a buck by shortchanging the city on curb appeal.
You're right. Edmonton went down that path long ago... I jest, I jest. However, the period of stagnant development in the 80s and 90s didn't help the City look less tired, combined with our terrible track record of knocking down historical buildings. It left Edmonton with a lot of buildings from a single era of style.It doesn't matter if it was a joke, you're still trying to justify your position using the slippery slope fallacy. Just because we allow a couple developments that are less than spectacular doesn't mean there is going to a spiral of increasingly awful looking buildings.
I'd bet that the Venn diagram of people who call it Deadmonton, and the people who know this building exists and have an opinion on how it looks is almost two completely separate circlesThis is why I hear "Deadmonton" quite often.