MousuG
New Member
I was there yesterday and I was disappointed to find that the idea that these towers are open to the waterfront rather than an obstruction, permeable to public use of the water's edge, isn't true in person. While at a large scale, the towers and the bridges convey a sense of welcoming to the waterfront, the ground level walkways exclusive to residents defeats that concept.
This comes across as Waterfront Toronto requiring that openess but when it got to the city approving its construction, somebody missed the point entirely and allowed for these walkways to obstruct open access. Along with the giant wall on its eastern edge, it's clear that this segment of the waterfront is going to be private and that's a terrible shame. Knowing this now, I would be completely opposed to any residential use south of Queens Quay. It should have been all institutional with open access for all. There is plenty of land available north of Queens Quay for condos.
That area between 29 and 39 buildings are open access as far as we understand it... and there will be a new park on the west side of the 29 and the new tower (currently a parking lot)... there are multiple ways to get to the lake for the general public. Now as to why there's a wall between Redpath and the building... I don't think Redpath want people to be walking into their factory randomly?
If you're thinking why you can't access that part of the edge now... might be because its under construction and none of the residents can access it either?