adma
Superstar
Er, syn...
Beware of lightning bolts.
Beware of lightning bolts.
The temptation to apply a uniform formula to everything, to make connections between different parts of town where they don't exist, and not to see differences, is strong - syn's gruesome perspective of "You can make an argument for massive towers anywhere if you want to" being the scariest.
I mean, how far should the preservation argument be taken? Are they advocating that the Distillery be maintained as a museum? Should we recreate the distillery complex in the style of a Black Creek Pioneer Village?
The Distillery buildings provide the impetus for the development of a new Toronto neighbourhood in an area that until recently was nothing but a wasteland of abandoned buildings in the midst of brown fields and urban blight.
Faux victorians or low rise/low density in-fill would be mundane and uninspired here
Faux victorians or low rise/low density in-fill would be mundane and uninspired here, where as with the St. Lawrence Neighbourhood, the historic buildings do not have to exist in a vacuum. The urban feel of architectural diversity adds to the interest of the streetscapes and makes them exciting and dynamic places to be, and is far more interesting than creating a one-dimensional neighbourhood - like City Place - or a one-dimensional district that takes its cue from an isolated grouping of buildings, no matter how special or attractive.