isaidso
Senior Member
Greater Toronto Area is quite unique among North American metropolitan areas that there are large skyscraper clusters spread out all over. Don't think this exists anywhere else in North America. With Mississauga skyline to get even more crazy in the next 10 years. It will confuse people even more.
The Toronto region is far further along in this respect than other urban areas on the continent. Interestingly, another Canadian metro, Vancouver is the closest other example. It speaks to how Canadian urban planning differs from that in the US. Los Angeles and Miami have elements of this too but neither have made concerted efforts to develop alternative clusters. In LA they exist due to the amalgamation of small cities that grew into the whole. In Miami, it's largely due to people wanting beach front views up and down the coast.
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