Category Archives: Architecture & Construction

Go, fish! Governments believed ready to splash some cash to lure aquarium to base of CN Tower

Ripley Aquarium

Ripley aquarium

Architectural renderings of the proposed Toronto Ripley Aquarium


Shore thing?: Toronto may finally get a much-needed new tourist attraction now that various levels of government are prepared to pump millions of dollars into the project — a Ripley Aquarium that will sit at the base of the CN Tower off Bremner Blvd.

In a story posted on its website last night, the Toronto Star reports that governments are prepared to take the plunge and invest taxpayer dollars in the aquarium project because of the obvious spin-off economic benefits such a major attraction would provide to the city. Ripley’s had applied to the city in November 2009 for zoning approval to build the three-storey entertainment complex which would include the aquarium as well as retail and restaurant facilities. The City gave approval last summer, but negotiations have continued to work out project details. Now the project is even closer to fruition, with sources telling the Star that construction is on the horizon since contracts could be signed as early as this summer. If so, the 150,000-square-foot attraction could be ready in time for the Pan Am Games in July 2015. 

One of the aquarium’s top tourist draws will be “the largest underwater tunnel in North America,” Ripley’s Entertainment president Jim Pattison Jr. told the Star. “There will be tens of thousands of different (marine) animals,  and some features that will be unique to Toronto,” he said. Further details about potential government investment in the aquarium are outlined in the Star story available at this link. Additional information about the Ripley’s Aquarium and its location beneath the CN Tower is provided in a public art plan that was submitted to the city’s Public Art Commission last July.

Building the aquarium beneath the CN Tower is a brilliant idea, I think, since the Tower draws nearly 2 million visitors a year to the area, and the Rogers Centre and convention centre are both right next door. Other nearby tourist draws include the Air Canada Centre just a five-minute walk away on Bremner Blvd., and Harbourfront just a 10-minute walk to the south. Toronto desperately needs more tourist attractions; as the Star points out, the Hockey Hall of Fame was the last major tourist attraction to open in the city, and that was 20 years ago.

It’s almost embarrassing to read the Toronto forum on TripAdvisor.com and see how short the list of city tourist attractions actually is (besides recommending visits to the Royal Ontario Museum, Art Gallery of Ontario, Eaton Centre, Hockey Hall of Fame and CN Tower, locals usually recommend tourists leave the city for day trips to Niagara Falls and Niagara-on-the-Lake instead.)

Personally, I’ll be thrilled to see construction commence since I have heard talk about bringing an aquarium to Toronto since I moved here nearly 30 years ago. That’s been more than enough time for talk and wishful thinking. It’s high time now to finally get this project going!

Below are some photos I’ve taken of the proposed aquarium site — presently a grassy knoll between the CN Tower and the Metro Toronto Convention Centre.

Aquarium development proposal sign

Aquarium development proposal sign near the CN Tower


Ripley Aquarium site

CN Tower observation deck view of proposed Ripley Aquarium site Nov. 2 2010


Ripley Aquarium site

View towards the Ripley Aquarium site from the base of the CN Tower


Ripley Aquarium site

Aquarium site viewed from walkway along the east side of the Rogers Centre


Ripley Aquarium site

The aquarium would be built on this grassy hillside beneath the CN Tower


Ripley Aquarium site

View toward the Ripley Aquarium site from the south side of Bremner Blvd.


Murano got them first. Is Casa the latest condo to succumb to the broken balcony panel blues?

Casa Condominium

Broken balcony panel at Casa Condominium on January 29 2011


Is it contagious? A couple of weeks ago, I wrote a post about glass panels breaking on a few balconies at the Murano condos North Tower at Bay and Grosvenor Streets. Well, it looks like Murano might not be the only downtown condo highrise whose residents and management are getting their share of grief from faulty balcony panels. The 46-storey Casa Condominium tower on Charles Street is sporting a nasty shiner, too, and Murano has yet another one near the top of its North Tower. 

While I was walking up Bay Street Saturday afternoon, something caught my eye when I glanced up the north side of Murano. I zoomed in for a look with the camera and saw a piece of wood filling the gap on a 32nd-floor balcony. This was not one of the two balconies on which glass panels had shattered only days apart last September; those panels were replaced before Christmas.

About an hour later I was walking near Casa when I looked up and thought I saw a familiar sight, about 27 storeys up the tower’s southwest corner. Sure enough, my camera confirmed that a piece of wood has been secured on a balcony in place of a shattered glass panel, pieces of which are still clinging to the frame. (This morning, the wood panel was still in place — and visible from blocks away.)

What’s up with the balcony glass on these buildings? Why are the panels breaking? Haven’t heard anything in the local news about the latest incidents, so I’m relieved that apparently nobody on the ground has been injured by any glass that may have fallen down. But now I can’t help but wonder just how safe it is to walk below any of the new condo towers constructed downtown recently. I guess I’ll find out if I see protective scaffolding around Casa next time I walk down Charles Street.

Since our own balcony sits directly above a busy back entrance to our building, I’m glad it has metal railings — rather than tempered glass panels — that are firmly cemented into the concrete floor.

Below are pics I took Saturday of the balconies with temporary wood panels at Murano and Casa.

 

Murano Condos

Wood panel on a Murano North Tower balcony January 29


Murano Condos

Wood panel on a Murano North Tower balcony January 29


Murano Condos

Wood panel on a Murano North Tower balcony January 29


Murano Condos

Wood panel on a Murano North Tower balcony January 29


Casa Condominium

Wood panel and shattered glass on a Casa balcony January 29


Casa Condominium

Wood panel on a Casa balcony January 29


Casa Condominium

Wood panel visible on a Casa southwest corner balcony January 29


Casa condominium

Casa condo tower on December 21 2010 (no broken panels visible)


Work on massive Maple Leaf Gardens renovation project still largely hidden from public view

Maple Leaf Gardens

Maple Leaf Gardens rendering from Ryerson University website


Landmark lives on: From the outside, there have been few signs that the iconic Maple Leaf Gardens hockey shrine is gradually being transformed into a multipurpose facility housing a giant grocery store and a university athletic centre. Last fall, scaffolding and green safety nets shrouded the east and south facades during brickwork and window replacement activity. For the past two months, crews have been busy working on utilities beneath the Carlton Street sidewalk and Church Street pavement at the southeast corner of the building. Over the same period, teams have been doing some roofing work atop the arena’s famous white dome. And the past two weeks, workers have been chiselling brickwork from a section of wall on the north side of the Gardens, along Wood Street.  None of the work gives any indication that the storied, historic Gardens soon will be living a renewed life as a modern retail and recreation facility.

However, it’s a different story altogether if you get to peek inside the loading door at the northeast corner of the building whenever a cement or construction supply truck comes out or goes in. Over the past six months, I’ve had that opportunity a handful of times, managing to catch quick glimpses of the cavernous construction zone that’s largely hidden from public view. Unfortunately, I’ve never had my camera with me, so I haven’t been able to track the interior construction progress in photos. In November, I got a brief look inside while the construction workers were on their morning break. With beams of light streaming through the narrow, small windows on the Gardens’ upper walls, the dusty interior had an eerie, haunting atmosphere. The building was just a gigantic brick shell; the inside had been gutted, and the ground was being dug out to create an underground parking garage. I couldn’t see anything holding up the huge walls and vast domed roof, but assume there must have been some kind of support for all that weight. The last few times I peeked inside, it appeared that excavation work was nearly complete; meanwhile, forms several storeys tall were being assembled so concrete could be poured to build walls and floors for the 70,000-square-foot Loblaw supermarket that will occupy the ground level of the “new” Gardens. Just last week I got another look, and it seemed obvious there is an incredible amount of work still to be done to create the upper levels that will house the 150,000-square-foot Ryerson University Sports and Recreation Centre.

The Centre is a $60 million project for which the federal government is contributing $20 million under the Canada Infrastructure Stimulus Fund (the university and Loblaws are responsible for the rest). However, projects that qualify for stimulus funding must be completed by March 31 of this year — and there is clearly no way on earth the Maple Leaf Gardens transformation will be done in time. Certainly looks like an extension or exemption will be required here. I’m anxious to see work start on the building exterior — the installation of street-level windows for the supermarket, the pedestrian entrances to the two separate facilities, and of course the vehicle entrance to the underground lot. Project details are provided in a Ryerson University press release available at this link. The complexities of the Maple Leaf Gardens transformation are outlined in this article from the Daily Commercial News and Construction Record, while seven construction photos by The Globe and Mail‘s Fred Lum can be viewed at this link on the Globe website. Below are some of my photos of the Gardens exterior at different times over the past several years.

Maple Leaf Gardens

Southeast view of Maple Leaf Gardens on November 28 2008


Maple Leaf Gardens

Former Carlton Street entrance to Maple Leaf Gardens on November 28 2008


Maple Leaf Gardens

East wall brickwork and window replacement on September 4 2010


Maple Leaf Gardens

Scaffolding was removed from the east wall in early December 2010


Maple Leaf Gardens

New windows in the east wall along Church Street


Maple Leaf Gardens

Work crew atop the Maple Leaf Gardens domed roof December 21 2010


Maple Leaf Gardens

Exterior work on the west end of the Carlton Street facade December 26 2010


Maple Leaf Gardens

Ryerson University and Loblaws sign on the Church Street wall


Maple Leaf Gardens

Brick removal from the Wood Street wall on January 14 2011


Maple Leaf Gardens

Construction equipment along Wood Street on January 30 2011


Maple Leaf Gardens

Facade work continuing along Wood Street on January 30 2011


Maple Leaf Gardens

Maple Leaf Gardens viewed from Wood Street on January 30 2011


Keeping tabs on … Aura Condos at College Park

Aura CondosAura condos

Night and day: condo tower renderings from Aura’s website


Filling in fast: The giant excavation for Aura condos has been filling in fast, with considerable progress being made on the building’s underground levels since my last Aura construction update 10 days ago.  Below are several site photos from January 29, along with some renderings of the tower from Aura’s website.

Aura condos

Aura condo construction approaches grade level along Yonge Street


Aura condos

Once an enormous excavation, the site is filling in fast


Aura condos

In fine form: Underground floors and walls take shape


Aur condos

In fine form: Underground floors and walls take shape


Aura condos

In fine form:  Underground floors and walls take shape


Aura condos

Construction approaches the site’s north side observation windows


Aura condos

Website rendering of Aura condos retail levels


Aura condos

Website rendering of Aura condos lobby exterior


City Scene: Yorkville’s highrise building boom

Yorkville condo and hotel towers

Davenport Road (near Bay Street) view of new towers being built in Yorkville


Growing up: Construction activity is apparent in practically every corner of downtown, and the Yorkville neighbourhood is no exception.

Pedestrians and drivers approaching Bay Street along Davenport Road are greeted by this view of three highrise towers currently under construction: The Florian condo building (left) and the two towers of the new Four Seasons Toronto Hotel and Private Residences.

Meanwhile, just beyond the bend in the road, east of Bay, there’s more construction in progress.  Excavation is underway for the Milan condominium tower on Church near Yonge, while in a few years’ time there could be as many as three towers rising right behind The Florian on McMurrich Street.

 

Keeping tabs on … SickKids Tower on Bay Street

SickKids Research & Learning Tower

Elm Street view of SickKids Tower progress January 29 2011


Floor pours: A lot has been happening at the corner of Elm & Bay since I profiled the new SickKids Research and Learning Tower in a post on January 11. The tower’s underground levels have been filling in quickly, and the construction team expects to finish pouring the P1 floor by the end of next week. Below are some pics I snapped this past Saturday through the security fence and the smudgy peekaboo portholes in the hoarding along the Bay Street sidewalk.

 

SickKids Research & Learning Tower

SickKids Tower construction viewed from Bay Street below Gerrard Street


SickKids Research & Learning Tower

Underground levels viewed from corner of Bay & Walton Streets


SickKids Research & Learning Tower

Underground levels viewed from corner of Bay & Walton Streets


SickKids Research & Learning Tower

SickKids Tower construction viewed from corner of Bay & Walton Streets


SickKids Research and Learning Tower

Floor pour for the P1 level should be finished next week


SickKids Research & Learning Tower

Underground levels viewed through an observation window on Bay Street


SickKids Research & Learning Tower

West end tower construction seen from an observation window on Bay Street


SickKids Research & Learning Tower

SickKids Tower fourth level construction viewed from Elm Street


Checking in on Charlie

Charlie Condos

Architectural rendering from the Charlie Condos website


From Chaz to Charlie: Yesterday I posted about Chaz on Charles Street. Today I’m taking a look at Charlie on Charlotte Street. (Far as I can tell, they’re not siblings — their names and street locations might be similar, but they’re separate projects by totally different developers.)

Now that she’s finally got an above-ground presence, passersby are starting to notice Charlie Condos in the Entertainment District.  Up until late last year, you couldn’t see much of her. Hoarding hid Charlie from public view on King Street West, so construction of her parking garage and underground levels could be seen only through a tall chain-link fence along a back lane off Charlotte Street. Work on Charlie’s below-ground floors reached street grade in early December, and now the building is beginning to rise above the bold blue hoardings that shield the sidewalk on the north side of King.

Designed by Toronto’s Diamond + Schmitt Architects, and a project of Great Gulf Homes, Charlie will “define mile-high style” (according to her website) — even though she’ll stand only 32 stories tall. But with her clear glass windows, aluminum frame, and heritage brick foundation, Charlie will look “elegant and evocative … classic and contemporary.” We’ll have to wait until at least several floors of windows and exterior finishing treatments have been installed to judge if that’s in fact the case. But by taking the place of what used to be a parking lot, Charlie is classing up the corner and already helping to boost property values in her immediate vicinity.

A friend of mine made a very handsome profit selling his Charlotte Street condo late last year, thanks to the interest that Charlie and other nearby condo projects, including M5V across the street on King, have stirred up in the area.

Below are some of my pics of construction progress at the Charlie site.

 

Charlie Condos

Charlie billboard at King & Charlotte Streets on September 26 2008


Charlie Condos

Charlie location at King and Charlotte Streets on September 26 2008


Charlie Condos

Charlie construction approaching street grade on November 23 2010


Charlie Condos

Charlie construction approaching street level November 23 2010


Charlie condos

Charlie construction approaching street level November 23 2010


Charlie Condos

Charlie construction approaching street grade November 29 2011


Charlie Condos

Charlie construction approaching street grade November 29 2011


Charlie Condos

Charlie underground levels approach street grade while the M5V condo tower nearby on King Street (left) is almost finished construction.


Charlie Condos

Charlie construction progress on January 14 2011


Charlie Condos

Charlie construction progress on January 14 2011


Charlie Condos

Charlie will block views from Charlotte Street of these nearby buildings


New condo tower’s sky lounge, social amenities and limestone podium bring all that Chaz to Charles St.

Chaz on Charles condos

Architectural rendering of 2-storey sky lounge at Chaz on Charles condos


Watch me watch you: It’s been about five years since a developer announced plans to build a residential tower on the site of a Brutalist-style office building at 45 Charles Street East.  Since then, I’ve been waiting patiently to see what  the highrise that will replace it will look like. My wait is over.

Designed by Sol Wassermuhl of Toronto’s Page + Steele IBI Group Architects, Chaz on Charles will be 39-storey condo tower featuring a five-storey limestone-clad podium topped by a sleek glass tower with recessed balconies. To fit nicely on the current streetscape, the podium will be “synched” with that of the 46-storey Casa condo tower right next door (to its west).

Chaz will be so packed with appealing amenities, its residents probably won’t want to spend much time in their own units. Heck, they won’t need to. According to the Chaz on Charles website, the main floor will boast not one but two lobbies “literally brimming with activity.” One will be “a living room-style lobby lounge,” while the other will offer “a series of smaller spaces” that include a living room, wet bar, dining room with full catering kitchen, and a billiards room — all of which will open onto an outdoor landscaped terrace.

Chaz will have top of the line fitness and recreation facilities, of course, along with not one but two theatres  (a movie screening room and sports viewing room), meeting room facilities, guest suites for overnight visitors, and a pet spa. Yes, no longer will you have to endure the embarrassment and humiliation of leading your muddy, smelly mutt through the lush lobby and elevators anymore, since there will be a special wash and blowdry room where you can give Fido a quick freshening-up after a walk in the grimy neighbourhood streets.

But wait, there’s more! What’s really going to put Chaz on the map — and instantly make it a midtown “landmark” (according to the website’s copywriters) — is the  signature architectural detail that will appear three-quarters of the way up the south side of the tower. I’ll let the people at Chaz describe it in their own words: “Jutting out from the 31st and 32nd levels on the south side of the building is a two-storey cantilevered box, framed in white concrete and illuminated at night. This is the Chaz Club, a lounge and dining space for the building’s residents, and it is a dazzling architectural gesture. From miles around, Torontonians will look up to see residents of Chaz, and their guests, enjoying cocktails on the club’s spacious terrace or relaxing inside this glass box in the sky.”

Yes, without a doubt, jealous people throughout downtown Toronto and from points miles afar will spend their evenings staring at the lucky, privileged few who will get to call Chaz home. If they can even see them, that is. With all the other highrises and towers planned for the immediate vicinity, views of the Chaz Club will likely be blocked from most sightlines. But not from mine! So in just a few years’ time, I’ll be able to sit back, relax and enjoy a nice glass of wine on my balcony while watching Chaz residents looking back at me while they sip cocktails in their chic, comfy glass box in the sky. Some things are worth waiting for, n’est-ce pas?

Below are some photos I’ve taken of the Chaz location during the past four years.

 

Chaz on Charles condos

Chaz on Charles development zoning sign outside 45 Charles St. E. in late 2007; the city subsequently approved a tower with six more floors.


Chaz on Charles condos

This office building at 45 Charles East will be demolished to make way for the Chaz condo tower


Chaz on Charles condos

Chaz condo sales office on August 29 2010


Chaz on Charles condos

Chaz condo sales office on August 29 2010


Chaz on Charles condos

Chaz condo sales office on August 29 2010


45 Charles Street East

45 Charles St. E. and the Casa condominium tower next door


45 Charles Street East

45 Charles St. E. and the Casa condominium tower next door


The Bromley apartments

Chaz on Charles will tower above The Bromley apartment building to its south on Isabella Street, seen here on January 29 2011


Chaz on Charles condos

Isabella Street view of Chaz on Charles condo site on January 29 2011


Chaz on Charles condos

Another Isabella Street view of the site where Chaz on Charles will rise


City Scene: Frank Gehry’s Baroque Stair at the AGO

AGO staircase

The view straight up the Frank Gehry-designed staircase in the AGO


Twists & turns: Most visitors watch their feet while they huff and puff their way up — or down — the many wooden steps of the Baroque Stair at the Art Gallery of Ontario. Some look out the windows, and some glance at the people they pass, but most don’t bother looking up. Straight up, that is, at the staircase spiralling upwards above them. It’s too bad, because they’re missing a real treat.

Designed by Frank Gehry, the Baroque Stair is one of my favourite architectural elements in the recently renovated gallery. Whenever I walk the Stair, I like to stop and look up at the sensuous curves of the wooden form that twists and turns overhead, linking ground-level Walker Court with the AGO’s new fifth floor contemporary art galleries. I notice new things about the Stair every time — surprising shapes, textures and colours that vary in different levels of light. For me, the Baroque Stair is a delightful piece of eye candy that takes my mind off the long, thigh-burning climb (it’s a very long walk indeed — the Stair is approximately 11 residential stories tall).

As AGO director/CEO Matthew Teitelbaum notes in an audio commentary on the gallery website, Gehry designed the Baroque Stair to be a “place of experience, not just a way of getting somewhere.” For me, that experience is one of the highlights of any visit to the AGO.  Below are several more pics of the Stair.

More photos and further information about Gehry’s gallery transformation are provided at this link on the AGO website.

 

AGO Baroque Stair

 

Art Gallery of Ontario Baroque Stair

 

Art Gallery of Ontario Baroque Stair

 

Art Gallery of Ontario Baroque Stair

Excavation work gets in full Motion for 29-storey apartment highrise being built at Bay & Dundas

Motion on Bay

Architectural rendering of Motion in Bay apartment highrise


Now digging: The parking lot is long gone and the earth is starting to move at the southwest corner of Bay and Dundas, where Concert Properties Ltd. has begun building its latest rental apartment building, Motion on Bay Street. 

The 29-storey tower will house 463 rental apartments (mainly studios and 1-bedrooms units) along with ground-level retail shops. The project’s website claims occupancy is anticipated for winter 2012, but that move-in date seems overly optimistic since site excavation is still just in the early stages.

I had been wondering how long it was going to take before a developer began building here, since Motion’s 570 Bay Street address is such a prime downtown location (the Eaton Centre and Ryerson University’s business school are right across the street; City Hall and the Financial District are a short walk to the south, and the hospital district is only two blocks north). It just didn’t make sense to maintain a parking lot on a piece of land worth millions of dollars.

A 50-storey condo tower originally had been proposed for this location as a sister to One City Hall, a 16-storey condo building at 111 Elizabeth Street that will be Motion’s next-door neighbour. However, the city would not approve the project since it would ruins views of Toronto’s beloved City Hall towers immediately to the south. The land was sold (at a huge loss, I heard) to Concert, which scooped it up with plans to build a shorter highrise that wouldn’t mar City Hall sightlines. 

I knew construction was imminent when the property was fenced off in late summer; pile driving equipment arrived on scene in late fall and hoarding went up over the Bay and Dundas Street sidewalks in late October and early November.

Below are pics of the Motion on Bay Street site, including some shots from 2008.

 

Motion on Bay Street apartments

Motion on Bay Street apartment site next to the One City Hall luxury apartment building (viewed here from the east side of Bay Street on September 26 2008)


Motion on Bay Street apartments

Another view of Motion on Bay Street apartment site on September 26 2008


Motion on Bay Street apartments

Motion on Bay Street apartment site fenced off in September 29 2010


Motion on Bay Street apartments

Motion on Bay Street apartment site fenced off in September 29 2010


Motion on Bay Street apartments

Pile drilling equipment operating on site November 23 2010


Motion on Bay Street apartment

Hoarding along Bay Street on November 23 2010


Motion on Bay apartments

Site viewed from the northeast corner of Bay & Dundas on November 23 2010


Motion on Bay Street apartments

Motion on Bay signs on hoarding along Dundas Street on November 23 2010


Motion on Bay Street apartments

Motion on Bay Street signs on Dundas Street hoardings November 23 2010


Motion on Bay Street apartments

Motion on Bay Street signs along Dundas Street on November 23 2010


Motion on Bay Street apartments

Dundas Street view towards Motion on Bay site November 23 2010


Motion on Bay Street apartments

Dundas Street view towards Motion on Bay site November 23 2010


Motion on Bay Street apartments

Bay Street view of the Motion on Bay site (left) on January 8 2011


Motion on Bay Street apartments

Bay Street view of the Motion on Bay site on January 8 2011


Motion on Bay Street apartments

Yellow excavator digging away on January 8 2011


Motion on Bay Street apartments

Excavation activity continuing on January 14 2011


Backed by TV and radio ads, The Mercer is latest condo project to launch in Entertainment District

The Mercer

Architectural rendering of The Mercer tower, from the condo website


Ad vantage?: For months, I have seen ads for The Mercer practically every other time I’ve passed a TV tuned to the CP24 news and informational channel. I’ve heard spots for The Mercer almost every time I’ve turned on the radio, too. The ads always catch my attention, and it’s not just because they feature three long-legged female models imitating the Beatles crossing Abbey Road while a singer croons “Mercer Mercer Me” in a retooled version of the Marvin Gaye hit record. They stand out because I never see or hear TV and radio ads for any other condo projects. I find plenty of condo ads in local newspapers and magazines, of course, and receive condo brochures and postcards in the mail regularly, but I can’t think of a single other downtown building project that has advertised so heavily on radio and TV.  (If there have been others, I’ve missed them.)

With The Mercer holding its grand opening tomorrow morning, I’ll be keen to see if the ads draw lineups of eager buyers outside their sales office at the corner of John & Mercer Streets. One of many condo projects either recently launched or being proposed for the rapidly-growing Entertainment District, The Mercer will be a 33-storey condo tower (down from the 38 floors originally planned) with 299 units, street-level retail, and four underground parking levels.

The building will rise on a site currently occupied by two parking lots and a small four-storey brown brick office building on Mercer Street, and will become a new neighbour to the trendy Le Germain boutique hotel.

The Mercer is designed by architect Brian Brisbin of Toronto’s BBB Architects. Full project details are available on The Mercer’s website.

Below are some recent photos of the condo project’s location, along with a website rendering of the building’s frontage on Mercer Street.

The Mercer Condos

The Mercer Condos location at Mercer and John Streets January 14 2011


The Mercer Condos

The Mercer Condo tower will rise on this site along Mercer Street


The Mercer Condos

Original development application sign for The Mercer Condos


The Mercer Condos

The Mercer Condos will rise above this parking lot on Mercer Street


The Mercer Condos

Rendering of The Mercer Condos frontage on Mercer Street


Keeping tabs on … Women’s College Hospital

Women's College Hospital

Excavation progress for Women’s College Hospital redevelopment


Digging down: Here’s a few snaps from January 18 of excavation progress at the Women’s College Hospital redevelopment site between Grenville and Grosvenor Streets. My January 6 post has architectural renderings of and full details about “The Hospital of the Future” being built on the site.

 

Women's College Hospital

 

Women's College Hospital

 

Women's College Hospital

 

Women's College Hospital

Will entrance cube, street-level windows and café improve facade for Toronto Reference Library?

Toronto Reference Library

A new three-storey glass entrance cube will welcome library visitors


One for the books: I love books, but I have never liked the 34-year-old Toronto Reference Library on Yonge north of Bloor. In fact, I could count on one hand the number of times I’ve been inside the place, but for me that has been enough. The library’s soaring central atrium always impresses me at first, but within minutes something about the look and feel of the interior makes me uncomfortable and downright depressed. I can’t put a finger on what bothers me, but once I’m inside I can’t wait to get out.

I’m not a big fan of the library’s vast brick fortress-like exterior, either. Although the building looks interesting and cool from some angles, it looms over a full block of Yonge Street with a hulking, brooding presence. I’ve never enjoyed walking past what feels to me like a prison for books; at street level, the facade is unwelcoming — dark and dreary, with nothing inviting to encourage passersby to enter and explore the literary treasures inside. But I’m hoping that will soon change with ambitious renovations currently underway to the entrance and facade — part of a five-year, $34-million “revitalization” program that’s supposed to finish in 2012.

 

Revitalization will connect the library to the street

According to a library website announcement detailing all the renovations and changes, the revitalization aims to create “a dynamic interface between the library and its community, connecting the library’s interior more directly to the street, and the public to the services inside.” The three biggest changes to the building exterior will include construction of a three-storey glass entrance “cube,” a glass wall running the full length of the library’s facade along Yonge, and a street-level library retail store and cafe.

Opening up that dark facade to let light into the library while adding some life and energy to the sidewalk sounds terrific to me; those renovations should address my biggest beefs about the building. Many significant changes are happening inside, too; they’re all outlined at the website link above. Will they improve the atmosphere I find so oppressing? Guess I’ll have to wait and see.

As for the exterior, I was happy to see hoarding erected around the library’s ground level in late 2010, a sign that the facade improvements were finally beginning. However, I have walked past at least three times since it went up, and haven’t yet heard any construction noise. The first time, a friend and I were halfway down the block before we realized we were walking under scaffolding; sadly, it didn’t feel much different than before the facade was boarded up. I have noticed that brickwork on some parts of the facade has been removed, though, so I’m hoping the project is proceeding on schedule. And you can bet I’ll be looking forward to the day the hoarding comes down and the new facade is revealed.

The architect behind the project is Ajon Moriyama of Toronto’s Moriyama and Teshima architects. Since Ajon is the son of Raymond Moriyama, the library’s original architect, it will be interesting to see how he improves on his dad’s design. Below is an architects’ rendering of the entrance cube and street-level glass facade, along with some photos I took recently of the building exterior.

 

Toronto Reference Library

Architectural rendering of Toronto Reference Library facade renovations


Toronto Reference Library

Toronto Reference Library Yonge Street facade November 11 2010


Toronto Reference Library

Toronto Reference Library Yonge Street facade November 11 2010


Toronto Reference Library

Toronto Reference Library Yonge Street facade January 9 2011


Toronto Reference Library

Toronto Reference Library Yonge Street facade January 9 2011


Toronto Reference Library

Toronto Reference Library main entrance under renovation January 9 2011


Toronto Reference Library

Toronto Reference Library Collier Street facade January 24 2011


Toronto Reference Library

Toronto Reference Library entrance cube construction January 24 2011


Another hotel/condo tower proposed for Yorkville

Ridpaths

A condo/hotel project is planned for the Ridpaths location on Yonge St.

Two towers: Toronto’s in the midst of a hotel building boom. As I mentioned in a recent post, the brand-spanking-new five-star Ritz-Carlton is scheduled to open next month, while three more high-end hotel/condo skyscrapers — the Four Seasons in Yorkville, the Living Shangri-La on University Avenue at Adelaide Street, and the Trump International Hotel and Tower at Bay and Adelaide Streets — are under construction and changing the city skyline already. The newest Le Germain boutique hotel opened at Maple Leaf Square a few months back, while a handful of other hotel properties (smaller and less expensive than the five-stars) are in the works for several downtown locations.

Now, another hotel/condo complex is being proposed for Yorkville near the new Four Seasons, on the site of the venerable Ridpaths furniture store on Yonge Street across from Canadian Tire. A developer wants City approval to build a 35-storey hotel/condo tower that would “partially” retain the existing Ridpath’s building on Yonge Street. A second tower — a condo building with 28 storeys — would be constructed on what is now a customer parking lot behind Ridpaths, accessed from McMurrich Street.

The complex would have 206 residential units; however, the application (as described on the City’s development applications website) does not indicate how many hotel rooms are planned.

In a November 2010 update on its website, The Greater Yorkville Residents’ Association (GYRA) said  it plans to meet with Ward 27 councillor Krystyn Wong-Tam “to suggest a working group be formed for residents and other members of the Bloor-Yorkville Community to be actively engaged throughout the application approval process.”

I’m curious to know if the developer plans to keep only the Tudor-style Ridpaths facade, or part of the actual store. If Ridpaths could somehow remain in operation on the premises (unlikely, I know), condo purchasers would get to enjoy furniture shopping only an elevator ride from their apartments.  Imagine the decadent convenience of not needing to bundle up in warm winter coats and boots when you want to go browsing for a new bedroom set or coffee table in the middle of February!

Below is a pic of the zoning application sign outside Ridpath’s, and a shot from McMurrich Street of the parking lot where a condo tower would rise.

Ridpaths

Ridpaths

Four Seasons Toronto hotel & condominium towers establish a new landmark for Yorkville district

Four Seasons Toronto

Four Seasons towers rising above the Yorkville Ave. fire station and library

Rapid rise: Even though it’s still under construction, the Four Seasons Hotel & Private Residences Toronto has already become a new  landmark for the Yorkville neighbourhood. You can’t miss it as you approach the Yonge Street Canadian Tire store from Church Street. It’s obvious from the Annex and from many places along Avenue Road, Bay and Yonge Streets. You can even see it from the south side of Bloor across from Holt Renfrew. That’s no small achievement considering that views toward Yorkville are blocked by some of the area’s oldest skyscrapers (the Manulife Centre and the two bank towers at Yonge & Bloor) as well as several new towers (18 Yorkville, Crystal Blu and Uptown Residences, to name but three). It certainly will make it easy to help guide tourists to Yorkville (I won’t have to point at the CIBC tower at 2 Bloor West anymore and say “go there; Yorkville’s right behind it;” I’ll be able to point out the Four Seasons instead. Designed by hotshot Toronto firm architectsAlliance, the two-tower complex is a project of Menkes Developments. Below is an architectural rendering of the property, along with some pics I recently took of the Four Seasons complex from several different perspectives in and around Yorkville. You can view even more photos of construction progress on the blog’s Photo Sets page (just click on the red tab at the top of this page and scroll down to the Four Seasons album).

Four Seasons Toronto

Architects’ rendering of the new Four Seasons Toronto hotel + condo complex


Four Seasons Toronto

Four Seasons Toronto seen from Scollard Street January 9


Four Seasons Toronto

Four Seasons Toronto seen from Church near Yonge on January 9


Four Seasons Toronto

Four Seasons Toronto from Avenue Rd at Yorkville Avenue on January 9


Four Seasons Toronto

Four Seasons Toronto seen from Bloor Street opposite Holts on January 9


Four Seasons Toronto

Four Seasons Toronto seen from Scollard Street on January 9


Four Seasons Toronto

Four Seasons Toronto seen from Bay Street at Davenport Road on January 9