CityPlaceN1
Senior Member
3600 is also quite the place but built in 1990 and not as eclectic. Of course both of these buildings are really in Markham so I have not thought to include them here.
Please include them. My Toronto includes Markham.
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3600 is also quite the place but built in 1990 and not as eclectic. Of course both of these buildings are really in Markham so I have not thought to include them here.
"Called 'Nate's Clam Shell.'
QUOTE Toronto Star.
There was also an other "Name".
Regards,
J T
TDSB Building at 5050 Yonge - Mathers and Haldenby 1970
It's funny. I know there's no accounting for taste, and there's really no arguing people out of what they like or don't like, but I think they made the right call here. None of the other designs seems iconic to me the way our current city hall does. Maybe it's just because it's what I'm used to, but I don't think so, because I've always really disliked Mississauga's city hall, inside and out, and I was pretty familiar with that for most of two decades. Toronto's city hall ended up in an episode of ST:TNG. I have a hard time imagining Mississauga's city hall, or any of these designs, getting that kind of international (interstellar?) nod.
Well, granted, as an exemplar of 80s-style postmodern neo-historicism, Mississauga City Hall doesn't really befit Trekkie-scifi-geek-style futurism. So it's unfair to use that template of judgment...
It's more a comment on the context you offered, i.e. about "suitability for particular cinematic contexts" rather than raw architectural quality. And unfortunately, other than retro-Gordon-Gekko features, there isn't a lot which Mississauga CH can be readily "adapted to", cinematically speaking...