Wishing to clarify something here. When I say "we starve our arts institutions in Canada" I am talking about the amount of money the organizations get for operating purposes. Hence I am saying it would be putting the cart before the horse to build a palatial opera house while the opera company always scratches for funds .... same old, same old, with respect to "Canadian traditions".
Well, it depends on what kinds of people. After all, there are people today who look at the Nathan Phillips Square walkways and ask "what were they thinking?"...
I've spoken with people familiar with the interior layout and indeed the spaces behind the Eastern wall along the Queen façade are the sidestage and storage areas with access to a "stage behind the stage". There are actually two stages of similar dimension back to back.
This puts to rest any ideas of using the Queen St. streetwall for any dynamic purposes. There is simply no room.
The only hope for that stretch is to have the existing spaces used for commercial, publicly accessible purposes. Like I mentioned above: a restaurant below the Jackman lounge and a café on the corner of Queen & Yonge would add a lot to this pedestrian "black hole" cutting NPS, Eaton Centre & The Bay from the vibrancy of Queen West.
So, who would pay for improvements on Queen, MetroMan?. Consider this, the Canadian Opera Company, while they sold every seat last year, still had to dip into their reserves to break even. Here's the news clip from the Globe:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...-its-rainy-day-fund-last-year/article1343045/
This "pedestrian black hole" on Queen West that you refer to really is nasty. In fact, when we go to the opera, we normally avoid walking along that ghastly stretch. What you have now is a testament to pre-2000 Toronto and Ontario attitudes.
- The construction of a new opera in Toronto never was a civic issue, the COC was left alone to fight their "thirty years' war".
- One Ontario government (an NDP one) cut down the Bay Wellesely proposal (too grandiose).
- It is alleged that when Queen/University was hatched, then-mayor Lastman was furious that the COC had firmly spurned his offer of the mainstage in North York (just off of Lastman Square) for a permanent home.
- As the project proceeded, the city administration never took an interest in the new opera house, and never looked at the posibilities of civic improvements to coordinate with the new building, even though the new building was to be within view of Nathan Philips Square.
The opera company acquitted themselves beautifully in the financial circumstances by slaving to just one goal, which was to create an excellent performance venue in which to showcase their art, and in which the audience can appreciate that art. At the start of the project, certain parties bitched and moaned about the lack of civic-mindedness in this project, and the opera company responded, in essence, "fine, show us the money".
I believe things would work out differently now as our design awareness at large is growing, but that excellent opera company of ours really
really needed a good auditorium. If ever there are to be exterior changes, it must be a civic effort and a donor would need to be involved. Good luck to all at this point in time of recession.
I'd settle for a decently renovated NPS, and a modest reworking of the opera's Queen facade, and then, let's get on with other things; what we have at this point is probably one of the five top opera facilities on the planet, and a very energetic opera company.