Additional renderings from the public presentation of March 27:
Interior hotel room and restaurant renderings:
Interior hotel room and restaurant renderings:
Well, if you've played Sid Meier's Civilization, you'll know that if you dispense with the granaries, our people are about to starve and the population will crater.Sorta off topically silly question: I wonder with all these redevelopments of grain terminals to more residential/public use, where all the grain is being actually stored...as the demand for that commodity is likely growing as opposed to abating.
Awesome project, in Collingwood no less. Hope one day we can see this with some of Montreal's silos.
It will be basically be mimicking a structure that is already there. It is (was) a grain handling tower, which is how they used to work. Grain was off-loaded from ships and carried up where it could be directed to the intended silo by gravity.I like the Silos restoration portion; the tower, as currently conceived, sticking out above the silos, looks a bit awkward to me.
Presuming the height wasn't simply trimmed back to fit the silos; I wonder if the building form couldn't mimic the silos using similar curves/scale and maybe blend a a bit better. Dunno. Need to think on a it a bit.
Most of grain elevators around the Great Lakes were pre-Seaway. Grain came in either via ship from (mostly) Thunder Bay or rail, then stored for transloading by rail to salt water ports like Montreal or Quebec City. Now, inland terminals in the Prairies and other provinces handle a lot of storage and grain can either go directly to salt water ports via rail or loaded at Thunder Bay then directly overseas. The few that are left in operation are used primarily for domestic supply. Off the top of my head, elevators are still in operation in Midland, Goderich, Sania, Port Colborne and Johnstown (Prescott). There are probably others. I don't know if Owen Sound is still in operation.Sorta off topically silly question: I wonder with all these redevelopments of grain terminals to more residential/public use, where all the grain is being actually stored...as the demand for that commodity is likely growing as opposed to abating.
I'm ok with the tower. If quality materials are used, it could be a pretty snappy homage to classic modernism.I love this except for that parasitic growth on the right side
I love the use of quaint little shops at the base of the silos. I find it works very well in St. Jacob's for example.
It will be basically be mimicking a structure that is already there. It is (was) a grain handling tower, which is how they used to work. Grain was off-loaded from ships and carried up where it could be directed to the intended silo by gravity.
Most of grain elevators around the Great Lakes were pre-Seaway. Grain came in either via ship from (mostly) Thunder Bay or rail, then stored for transloading by rail to salt water ports like Montreal or Quebec City. Now, inland terminals in the Prairies and other provinces handle a lot of storage and grain can either go directly to salt water ports via rail or loaded at Thunder Bay then directly overseas. The few that are left in operation are used primarily for domestic supply. Off the top of my head, elevators are still in operation in Midland, Goderich, Sania, Port Colborne and Johnstown (Prescott). There are probably others. I don't know if Owen Sound is still in operation.
Not exactly sure when you are hoping for. You want the structures returned to look like they are abandoned and unused? The main reason they are still standing at all is that tearing them down was deemed by the town to be prohibitively expensive.This project looks fascinating and commendable but unlikely to happen any time soon. Hopefully, the changes are all reversible so that the silo can be restored to its original appearance if the residential uses end one day (which would likely be generations from now if this project even moves forward).
Not exactly sure when you are hoping for. You want the structures returned to look like they are abandoned and unused? The main reason they are still standing at all is that tearing them down was deemed by the town to be prohibitively expensive.