David_Brown
New Member
Ha! I think members of this forum are if anything, overly critical of Toronto and its skyline. Many buildings that are mediocre or forgettable are completely trashed here.
Ha! I think members of this forum are if anything, overly critical of Toronto and its skyline. Many buildings that are mediocre or forgettable are completely trashed here.
Yes, ground level is important, but you are looking at the CBD of Shanghai, is there tons of interesting life happening near King and Bay on the weekends, or la defence? It is the same in every city. Most CBDs don't has as much life as older residential areas..
Lujiazui has a major mall just near those towers with tons of shoppers, the riverfront has tens of thousand of tourists every single day on the waterfront promenade lined with cafes and restaurants, and if I am not mistaken, there are museums, an apple store as well as some upscale retail near the world financial centre. That's probably more we can say about our financial district, where retail stores don't even open on the weekends. On the weekends, our financial district is almost dead quiet, with occasional people walking past it to the waterfront.
Ha! I think members of this forum are if anything, overly critical of Toronto and its skyline. Many buildings that are mediocre or forgettable are completely trashed here.
Oxford expects to expand its investment in rental properties to $2.2-billion over the next five years, Mr. Seaman said, with roughly a quarter of that growth coming from developing new rental properties, which it plans to own long-term and manage itself.
The company is looking at developing high-end luxury rentals in the downtown cores of major cities, close to transit, universities and hospitals, which would be aimed at graduate students, academics and medical professionals willing to pay premium rents. Its focus now is on downtown and midtown Toronto, and it is “actively looking” at building new rentals in Calgary, although it’s closely watching the job numbers amid falling oil prices.
Is Oxford Place the only residential project we know of in which Oxford is involved? I can't remember hearing of any others, so maybe this project is being rethought with more residential and less hotel/casino?
The MTCC is replacing street front glazing. In some sections, they've built indents to allow for more sidewalk room around Richard Serra's sculptures. The new glazing seems clearer, and lacks the mullions. If they do that to the entire facade, it'll make a big difference to the street presence on Front which currently feels like it has its back turned to this major street.
Sadly, the MTCC North is way past the point where putting some glass walls will do.
AoD