zang
Senior Member
The city is being proactive, but it's hands are tied behind its back. Heritage Preservation Services has a massive backlog. There's no fixing that without more money and more resources.
Or a better, more restrictive set of criteria for labelling something as "heritage"?
This city seems intent on saving *everything* over a hundred years old, instead of the best of the best. If it's in any way decorative, it gets saved. Imagine if we did that with every nice building in the original city of York? We'd have a city full of two story houses with nowhere near the amount of commerce, excitement or population. Hamilton would be the economic capital of the province.
If this insane level of heritage preservation had started 70 years ago, we'd have held on to Shea's Hippodrome (https://tayloronhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/f1231_it08401.jpg). It had immense cultural history, and was a beautiful theatre. But in turn, were it not torn down, we would be short the architectural icon that is Nathan Philips Square.
The Sam the Record Man sign is a perfect example of the issues some have in this city. We are glorifying an anachronistic sign that once belonged to a business that slowly dwindled away because it couldn't keep up with the times. All because of what? Nostalgia? It has less cultural importance on the music scene than half of 1960s Yorkville did, but because someone bought their first New Order LP at Sam's, it "must be saved".
Cities are organic, and in order to grow we need to let go of a lot of the past. We have to pick our battles. We can't save everything. We should *only* save *the best*.
Otherwise, it's just hoarding.