ttk77
Senior Member
I'm not sure how comparable the situation is to the Oxford towers, but are there many here who regret that we an no longer see the Royal York from the lake and wish Southcore had not gone up?
gweed:
One I can think of is the University College-John Street axis. Not so much so "protected" per se but at least be cognizant of the potential impact.
AoD
you put too much emotion to a TV tower. It is nothing more than a tall concrete TV tower. Let the city grow and our skyline evolve, please.
Shanghai's Oriental Pearl Tower used to be the same iconic thing, then the city built two office buildings much taller than it in the past few years, and the people didn't seem to feel losing their "home". I would be happy if we build something taller than the CN tower and change our perception of the skyline completely.
Yes, let's look to China for preservation cues.
Have you visited Shanghai yourself before being all sarcastic about it? We need to be fair instead of being blindly dismissive about anything related to China.
The city has preserved plenty of heritage buildings. Although our media made it sound like Shanghai has demolished everything more than 30 years old to make room for new shiny skyscrapers, the old city centre has tons of historical buildings that were meticulously preserved. Most of the demolished buildings are really the sort of tacky commie blocks from the 1950-70s with horrible living conditions and sanitary standard (most without washrooms).
The French Consession for example is very well protected, with most old low rise store front preserved and restored, combined with new highrises in the back, not unlike what we are trying to do in downtown Toronto.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shanghai_French_Concession
That is fascinating to know, i was unaware of this. Makes me quite keen to go, places like Singapore lost a great deal.
Also Google "the Bund" it has a very Euro scaled Beaux Arts European style streetscape that can't be found anywhere in North America.