Torontovibe
Senior Member
Corktown Common is not up to your standards, then?
Corktown Common is a nice park so I don't want to be overly critical of it but at this point, it doesn't really offer me much. I'm an urban guy. I want big city parks that offer serious animation and things to do besides sports. I am not a sports guy. When I go to Corktown Common, I sit and look at the skyline for 5 minutes, then I go. There is nothing else for me to do there. The park has been almost empty whenever I go, so it's not a good people watching place. (at this time) There are no flower gardens or design elements that hold my attention. There is nothing outstanding to film besides the skyline. There is no focal gathering point where interesting things go on or people ineract. In fact, it's pretty much just grass and tress, with a nice children's playground. (so far, not many children here either) I much prefer public spaces like Washington Square in NYC. (I love crowded parks & people watching)
At this point, there is not much reason to go to this park, except for just going for a walk, which is what I do. I take a walk through here to see if things are changing but it pretty much stays the same. What I almost always see is 3 or 4 people walking their dog and on a rare occasion, a couple with their child, in the playground. I have never seen more than 10 people in the park at one time. Of course, that is because the Pan-Am Village is empty, I realize that. It will get busier in time but I don't think it will get much more animated unless they program events in the park. I hope that is in the plans.
I wish this park would have had at least a small public square at the entrance near the street.(with a cafe/restaurant directly across the street) A central work of art/fountain with close grouped seating and a performance stage, would have been great. If I'm going to stay in a park, I need something to keep my attention. I need good people watching, entertainment or something beautiful to look at/film.
There are no formal gardens or colourful plants in this park. Something like the new art on Cherry Street would be fantastic in a park like this. This park is great as a neighbourhood park or as a place to play sports or even walk your dog. I don't see this park as a destination for anyone outside of the neighbourhood. Maybe one day, when we see ourselves as a truly world capital, we will build those kind of parks. I think we might just be on the cusp of that. Each year we are getting more ambitious designs in everything from parks to condos, so I'm hoping things keep going in that direction.
There is nothing wrong with building neighbourhood parks or passive parks to play sports & walk fido. Every neighbourhood needs local, neighbourhood parks but I also think great cities need a few distinctive, stand out parks, that are major attractions. For some reason, the people of Toronto do not want these landmark parks and that's why we have so few. Roundhouse Park with its trains, is one of the few distinctive parks we have and on weekends, it's a great place to be. Yep, grand parks cost big bucks and obviously, this city does not go for things that are grandiose.
The same thing applies to our public realm and even our beaches. I'd love to see just one beach cleaned up, upgraded and given a stylish redo but as we know, that's not in the cards.
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