As suggested above, I'd far prefer that they save some of the red brick and incorporate it into some sort of commemoration, rather than saving a token building.

Pretty much exactly what I was talking about. Definitely not the highrise Dickinsons, and definitely not talking about making the brownbricks habitable. The interior design and layout is notoriously bad and ill-equipped for anything. It'd be a 100% gutting and incorporation of the brick facade, mass, and lawn (e.g as part of a new public building, square, or condo). How that could be done, I'm not sure. But I think there'd be some merit.
 
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Some updates today:

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Yesterday.

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The area needs more colour, and if they stick to Diamond Schmitt's cladding plan from this rendering, it'll get a little more!

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Thank goodness for this development. A few years ago it was SO busted and ugly. So glad it's more chic and rich looking.
 
Do we have any middle class neighbourhoods built with a similar plan as Regent Park, with townhouses along internal walkways and extensive landscaping and greenery? Regent Park was isolated from the city by its site plan and proved a failure. Many similar housing projects of its time also proved to be failures. But there were some success stories like Lafayette Park in Detroit, which has been a popular and stable middle class neighbourhood since it was built as an urban renewal project.
 
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Probably some of the older garden city layouts with smaller housing sizes and overall block scales.
 

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