OHH and from the release page.
Yes, and it does look wierd beside the curvy hydro building.


Yes, and it does look wierd beside the curvy hydro building.
Walking along University Ave near St. Patrick station yesterday, it occurred to me that if Toronto ever gets a mega-supertall this is where it should / would go. The scale of the street certainly could handle it, there's some distance from the CN Tower so that it wouldn't compete with it in the skyline, and there are plenty of non-descript mid-rises in the area that no one would miss. Also, shadows over NPSquare wouldn't be an issue if located closer to Dundas and the University subway line would get a major boost, relieving some of the pressure on the Yonge line.university avenue is going to look ridiculously impressive in 5 years. from st. clair all the way down to the lakeshore.
I'd be okay with Piano or a top quality Foster (the firm is so big now it's become a factory of recycled gimmicks and gizmos) but Pelli does nothing for me. IMO, Richard Rogers would be perfectly suited for Toronto as well as a great rival to that British designed engineering marvel going up out westRenzo Piano / Cesar Pelli / Norman Foster-designed skyscraper with offices
Huh? Why? That's a great building. It has a beautiful curved facade that suits the intersection perfectly. While I'd love to see an example of this style built a lot taller, it would have to be built somewhere else because the current height is in keeping with the surrounding architecture.Lookin' good. Just wish they'd demolish the hyrdo building across the street.