Traynor
Senior Member
I wasn't born, but it doesn't make sense to tear down a 2nd great building because we tore down the 1st.
I never said nor intimated that idea.
It's amazing how the written word is useless on the Internet. No amount of precise wording will stop people from jumping to the most extreme conclusions. I only tried put the Van der Rohe podium in its proper perspective. All too often certain buildings are vaulted to the pantheon of architectural perfection. They are perceived as unblemished icons that all others should aspire to. When in fact, they may have a dark side, such as in the case of the old Toronto Bank building, as well as the old Bank of Montreal building which stood directly across the street. Neither HAD to be torn down to make way for progress... And by progress I am speaking about the need to replace them with much larger office towers for much needed commercial space... because neither were replaced by towers at all, just low-rise podia to house bank branches.
What tore them down was hubris and ego by the architect and developers. That is: "I don't want any old buildings to block my vision of perfection and everyone's view of it."
If Mies were alive and designing today, with his love of modernism, he would have had to find a way to incorporate the old building in his vision of the TD Centre and I am sure he would have done a bang up job at it too. If he had done that and not simply did a Block-Buster demo job... In my eyes, that would have vaulted him to the level of esteem that most people give him now. THEN he would deserve that much praise. Now in my eyes he is only great.... Not perfect.
I find historic teardowns to be worth it if it is replaced by a building that defines the city. The Dominion bank complex is one of the most beautiful places in the city, and far and away better than whatever the beaux arts building could have ever given to this city.
Nice sentiment... I am sure that is exactly what the most people said in 1964 about the old Toronto Bank Building. So be careful how easily you throw that idea around... Because soon someone may come up with a development which puts that corner and perhaps the whole complex to a much better use. It IS old enough and beloved enough to be consider historic, to use your example ... They may mow down the whole core to put up a Spaceport or some such nonsense because what the new thing gives to the city is way more than any old glass box could have given to the city.
I know... Heaven forfend!!! It may be hard to believe, but who can say what value future people will hold of Mies or any of our architecture? Nothing is a Sure Thing.
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