Condo Critic: Offices, condos complete transformation
Though it's a bulky building, the Glas condominium seems smaller than it is and makes sense in taking advantage of existing infrastructure.
Jul 18, 2009 04:30 AM
CHRISTOPHER HUME
The transformation of King and Spadina is all but complete. Though it remains very much a work in progress, its days as a sweaty industrial precinct are long gone.
Indeed, the warehouses and factories where workers once toiled have now been converted to smart offices and cosmopolitan condos.
At the same time, numerous new residential buildings have appeared in the neighbourhood.
Some are better than others, of course, but generally speaking the architectural quality has been unusually high.
These streets, each more urban than the next, seem to bring out the best in Toronto architects. But it must be said, this isn't a context that promotes the kind of sexy solo architecture that grabs headlines.
Instead, it is a location that calls out for the sort of fabric buildings that form the city. We may not always pay close attention to them, but they add up to the sum of the city.
Condo Critic
GLAS, 25 OXLEY ST.: Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of this rather large condo complex is that it seems so much smaller than it really is.
Filling the best part of a city block, it faces onto Oxley St. as well as Charlotte St., a short road running north from King St. Though taller and bulkier than the surrounding buildings, Glas reads almost as a series of discrete structures, some transparent, others clad in dark masonry, which appears to have become decidedly trendy in Toronto in the last several years.
Though one might complain about the bulk of this complex, it happens to make sense. After all, the need to intensify our use of the city, to take maximum advantage of its extensive existing infrastructure has never been greater.
The sheer size of the project is most visible on the north side, which faces Oxley, a tiny alley of a street extending east from Spadina. Here, the building consists of a two-storey glass and stainless steel base; it contains a row of street-level townhouses as well as the less-than-obvious main entrance, yet another shiny metallic element.
A glass facade stretches above several more floors until it gives way a to a series of setbacks. Built right out to the sidewalk, the Oxley frontage couldn't be more urban; in winter inhabitants will be blown in with the wind.
On Charlotte, the building has a bit more room to breath. A series of striking circular steel planters brings visual interest to the sidewalk. A box-like architectural feature, made of black brick, give the condo some heft and helps anchor it in its site.
The south side, accessible by an unnamed laneway, is the most obviously residential, mainly because of the balconies that punctuate the facade.
On the Oxley (north) side, the building could be commercial, even corporate, especially at grade. But because it is also the location of the service entrance and an unexpected row of garages, the south facade is the most problematic.
The lane is shared with another condo and has been treated as a strictly utilitarian space; on the other hand, it's the most desirable from a dweller's point of view. The contrast between the sky above and the mud below has rarely been harder to ignore.
Grade: B+
WHAT DO YOU THINK? Email
condocritic@thestar.ca