pw20
Active Member
I'd rather see the facade's preserved then the building being fire-bombed by an absentee landlord...
The outside is gorgeous. There are some lovely interior details (the staircases) but the mushroom columns aren't really something to write home about.
We face this issue a lot - similar to the North Toronto Collegiate reconstruction - do we save what we can (a facade) when we don't have enough money to completely renovate an out of date building, or do we prop up a building with stop-gap measures until potentially, we find the funds we need to re-purpose an out of date building. (For example the cost of completely renovating NT was astronomical)
As urban enthusiasts - what is our cost benefit between letting a building rot until financing can come together to renovate it so the 2000 ppl on this board are happy, losing the building entirely, or saving a bit of the building so an entire corner is re-vitalized?
I'm leaning towards saying save the facade if that's what is actually going to get done.
The outside is gorgeous. There are some lovely interior details (the staircases) but the mushroom columns aren't really something to write home about.
We face this issue a lot - similar to the North Toronto Collegiate reconstruction - do we save what we can (a facade) when we don't have enough money to completely renovate an out of date building, or do we prop up a building with stop-gap measures until potentially, we find the funds we need to re-purpose an out of date building. (For example the cost of completely renovating NT was astronomical)
As urban enthusiasts - what is our cost benefit between letting a building rot until financing can come together to renovate it so the 2000 ppl on this board are happy, losing the building entirely, or saving a bit of the building so an entire corner is re-vitalized?
I'm leaning towards saying save the facade if that's what is actually going to get done.