Coming along slowly: more hoarding up, and painted…

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Over two and a half months later, a bit further along:

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I have to say this project really saddens me. I understand the practical necessity, and at least it's a decent design (although could be more responsive to the building in both material and form) but this really ruins the triangular plan and this beautiful west edge of the library. :(
 
I have to say this project really saddens me. I understand the practical necessity, and at least it's a decent design (although could be more responsive to the building in both material and form) but this really ruins the triangular plan and this beautiful west edge of the library. :(

I was also saddened when hearing about this but then I had gone last week and didn't even notice it. I didn't even think it had started construction yet. I went by again today to have a look. It's actually not as bad as the render makes it appear. The addition is on the back of the building on a narrow side street, covered in trees and without enough room to back up for the view as seen in the render. The view of the building at the main corner at Harbord & St. George is preserved. You won't even see the addition from there.
 
Personally wish the addition drew more from the vertical language of Robarts rather than being some generic glass polygon.

Also wondering- I wonder if Robarts could work much better with a more pedestrian-oriented landscaping around it-more paved areas, the space being more park or square-like, with Robarts sitting as an object within the space, rather than the landscaping being the left-over space not occupied by the structure.

As of now, it still suffers from the problem most modernist-brutalist structures, face, which is that they're often surrounded by an apron of under (and often un-) defined space that often gives them an unwelcoming feeling.
 

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