DavidCapizzano
Senior Member
Well, in case you are one of those that think Dubai architecture would be what we should aspire to in Toronto:
I don't know where you would have gotten that idea.
Well, in case you are one of those that think Dubai architecture would be what we should aspire to in Toronto:
Yeah I am getting pretty tired of the mantra on this forum that I should somehow be cool with boring designs just because the architect knows how to detail cladding (oh my god groundbreaking look at that seam here's your god damn RIBA trophy)
95% of what you just said won't make a single difference to 95% of people who either pass by or use this building, and that is a shame. This is barely RSH - this is milquetoast RSH at best. I said the same thing in the Eaton Centre thread - the design literacy level on this forum is way above the average person, and regardless of the talent involved in the firm, it is extremely obvious that this is a bleak and timid effort on all parts.
CIBC Square was supposed to be incredible, and it's green. The Well was supposed to be incredible, and it's green. I'm going to need a bit more to go on than just "But the details!"
Grand buildings typically have grand lobby spaces. They're not meant to make the people going through them feel small, but just signal that this is not your average building, and that you should be impressed with it. If you were to walk into a significant structure but encounter a small, cramped space instead, I suspect you'd feel that either the developers were cheap or at minimum that the building was not noteworthy.What is the point of a huge lobby like this building has? Trying to make people feel small? There is no street presence, just a dead space to walk by. The building makes an attractive architectural model, I'll admit.
What is the point of a huge lobby like this building has? Trying to make people feel small? There is no street presence, just a dead space to walk by. The building makes an attractive architectural model, I'll admit.
WPP3 has retail and 85 Richmond will have retail when it's done.
Although inside the building, expansive lobbies can also be marshalling areas for fire drills and real fires / evacuations.
That's also a reason for exterior plazas and courtyards.
Of course you need large lobbies for that. I guess I should have been more clear. Big TALL multi-story lobbies. I think that bank architecture was famous for this. Just surprised it still goes on. And of course, the point was ground-floor retail. Not basement or upper floor. It makes for a dead connection to the street I think. I like the way One Bloor engages with the street, for example.