CanadianNational
Senior Member
A big PDF about the proposed redevelopment, from HUPEG (Hamilton Urban Precinct Entertainment Group)
The most interesting part of the development are for the demolition of the existing Convention Centre at base and its relocation to Jackson Square. Then, the art gallery is to be demolished and rebuilt on the former Convention Centre lot, with a tower atop. The present site of the Art Gallery will hold two point-ish towers, opening up some ground-level landscaping for an improved Concert Hall entrance, plus improved west, north and south access.
Two more towers are slated to fill in the existing parking lot at the north-west end of the site.
It's better, maybe, but it still seems it could use another pass by the ol' drawing board.
-Will the new art gallery be gorgeous, or at least better than what it is replacing, sculpture garden and all? The original one may not have been sufficient nor free of problems, but let's face it - it made for a stunning modernist composition along with its concomitant concert hall. The new one had better live up to that.
-The new, slightly widened access through the block north of City Hall is free of its troubling overhangs, but it looks pinched by some kind of demand for raw square footage on the new towers. If there's one place that needs a dose of luxe and lovely after years of looking like a second-rate underpass, this is the one. C'mon, Hamilton! Rise to the occasion!
-The proposed re-do of the stadium looks boxy, drab and ordinary as all hell. Yikes. Nothing should look that mundane and stale by the time it gets to the renders. It looks like a suburban office-park warehouse, and with that much cheerless aluminum siding planned, it's going to look like a poundcake left out in the rain all too swiftly.
One good thing is that the planned new concentration of street-level retail and such will really help the area, helping mend the blasted hole that these older, blockbusting developments caused in the flow and continuity of downtown. I didn't dare hope the city would ever get to repairing it. It does seem to be an improvement in this regard.
https://pub-hamilton.escribemeetings.com/filestream.ashx?DocumentId=216822
From HUPEG's PDF:
The most interesting part of the development are for the demolition of the existing Convention Centre at base and its relocation to Jackson Square. Then, the art gallery is to be demolished and rebuilt on the former Convention Centre lot, with a tower atop. The present site of the Art Gallery will hold two point-ish towers, opening up some ground-level landscaping for an improved Concert Hall entrance, plus improved west, north and south access.
Two more towers are slated to fill in the existing parking lot at the north-west end of the site.
It's better, maybe, but it still seems it could use another pass by the ol' drawing board.
-Will the new art gallery be gorgeous, or at least better than what it is replacing, sculpture garden and all? The original one may not have been sufficient nor free of problems, but let's face it - it made for a stunning modernist composition along with its concomitant concert hall. The new one had better live up to that.
-The new, slightly widened access through the block north of City Hall is free of its troubling overhangs, but it looks pinched by some kind of demand for raw square footage on the new towers. If there's one place that needs a dose of luxe and lovely after years of looking like a second-rate underpass, this is the one. C'mon, Hamilton! Rise to the occasion!
-The proposed re-do of the stadium looks boxy, drab and ordinary as all hell. Yikes. Nothing should look that mundane and stale by the time it gets to the renders. It looks like a suburban office-park warehouse, and with that much cheerless aluminum siding planned, it's going to look like a poundcake left out in the rain all too swiftly.
One good thing is that the planned new concentration of street-level retail and such will really help the area, helping mend the blasted hole that these older, blockbusting developments caused in the flow and continuity of downtown. I didn't dare hope the city would ever get to repairing it. It does seem to be an improvement in this regard.
https://pub-hamilton.escribemeetings.com/filestream.ashx?DocumentId=216822
From HUPEG's PDF:
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