I like the office component. This part of Toronto needs a lot more neighbourhood-building, however, and this project isn't really helping in that regard.
People who want 'supertalls' and compare us to China are just 'fanboys'. Anyone with any experience in planning knows that building height is pretty irrelevant when it comes to building functional communities. I suggest that, instead of looking at the dysfunctional hell that is shanghai for inspiration, we look at London or Berlin.
In places like Hong Kong, high rise structures work fairly well because families are willing to live in them and space is provided for them to do so. These developments currently being proposed in Toronto are so strongly geared to a transitory class of young urban professionals, that we are condemning parts of the city to never reaching proper urban maturity. This model simultaneously isolates suburbs from new ideas (see NY).
Cityplace, with all its flaws, is one of the best examples of family-friendly high-rise development in terms of its built form. I want to see this city building projects where you could see your 80-year old father living peacefully, or where you would like to raise a child. If this development and the LCBO lands go so high and pay so little attention to ground level, I'm afraid we will have missed the chance to have a beautiful inclusive community steps from the financial district.