UtakataNoAnnex
Senior Member
Welp...I mean it could be worse. Those fin arrangements need to be fleshed out more, IMO...currently they reminds me of something that's gone moldy as they are.
Sorry to start a Ruckus people! But if this building was going to be built in New York or Chicago no one would really make a stink over it. But in Toronto it's X out ! They like to see all transparent glass facades with an overkill of balconies! If this facade isn't good enough for a condo because of its narrow rectangular windows. Then it would definitely look great as a supertall office tower in this city!This is some uninspired garbage that no amount of curtain wall or fin expressionism can save.
They shouldn't've bothered with renders as it is clear they had no idea what they were trying to produce.
Sorry to start a Ruckus people! But if this building was going to be built in New York or Chicago no one would really make a stink over it.
They like to see all transparent glass facades with an overkill of balconies!
If this facade isn't good enough for a condo..................
because of its narrow rectangular windows
. Then it would definitely look great as a supertall office tower in this city!
No, you weren't the only one...Am I the only one who thought the original render looked decent? I liked the massing and shape and curtain wall is always a plus in my books.
Anyways I honestly think this could turn out good, or a disaster with no inbetween as it currently stands.
As I said, it's mostly about what developers are willing to throw what kind of money at it.Developers in Vancouver have upped their game so much and then there is Toronto. look at this new proposal by BOSA properties, designed by Heatherwick. puts Toronto to shame. is it really that hard to be creative?
Axed childcare and downsized retail in redesigned Vancouver towers (RENDERINGS) | Urbanized
The proposed towers at 1700 Alberni Street in downtown Vancouver by Heatherwick Studio have been redesigned.dailyhive.com
Developers in Vancouver have upped their game so much and then there is Toronto. look at this new proposal by BOSA properties, designed by Heatherwick. puts Toronto to shame. is it really that hard to be creative?
Axed childcare and downsized retail in redesigned Vancouver towers (RENDERINGS) | Urbanized
The proposed towers at 1700 Alberni Street in downtown Vancouver by Heatherwick Studio have been redesigned.dailyhive.com
Developers in Vancouver have upped their game so much and then there is Toronto. look at this new proposal by BOSA properties, designed by Heatherwick. puts Toronto to shame. is it really that hard to be creative?
Axed childcare and downsized retail in redesigned Vancouver towers (RENDERINGS) | Urbanized
The proposed towers at 1700 Alberni Street in downtown Vancouver by Heatherwick Studio have been redesigned.dailyhive.com
When it comes to architecture/design, Toronto is an extremely conservative city; moreso than any place I've ever been. I sometimes forget as I've been here 20 years now but the dominant aesthetic has always been stripped down bare bones functional, staid, muted colours (grey/beige/washed out greens/blues), concrete over stone, with a strong aversion to anything that hints at luxury, ornamentation, or non-conformity. When something is proposed that breaks with those rigid design parameters the old guard ALWAYS weigh in aggressively with their condemnation.
I've often wondered why Toronto is like that but I guess its the by-product of being a blue collar industrial city up until very recently. Design is viewed as frivolous and often gets ridiculed as excessive. A lot of the time they just don't understand design, period. If I can make a car analogy. Toronto loves a Volvo but a Maserati is vulgar. The latter is TOO flashy/too exciting. We even had a City official criticize that E-Sports proposal for being 'too exciting' for Toronto. It's one of the things about Toronto I'll never wrap my head around.
That Vancouver proposal? They'd go mental if they built something like that here.
Too, I am wary of over-baked generalizations about the nature of this city and its alleged propensity for certain aesthetics.I have been told that Toronto is an extremely cheap city (someone else's word: it's the cheapest city in the world) - being conservative in design parameters (because of how it will look) is one thing - choosing not to because how much doing extra will cost vs doing the bare minimum is another.
And I am not sure if it's fair to uses a Volvo vs Maserati comparison - the former is at least design competent (if boring).
AoD
Too, I am wary of over-baked generalizations about the nature of this city and its alleged propensity for certain aesthetics.