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Issue No 191 February 2, 2012
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FEATURE STORIES:
1. Jane Jacobs, Undone
IN THIS ISSUE: EVENTS submit an event
1. Jane Jacobs, Undone
NEWS | ACTION submit a news or action item
4. Building Stories: The Beginning of a Canadian Heritage Spring
LINKS submit a link
9. BlogTO: Fire losses in Toronto
SUPPORT 25. Support Built Heritage News
CONTACT
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| EVENTS : Issue No 191 February 2, 2012 | |||||||||||
In the 50-plus years since urban thinker, author, and activist Jane Jacobs wrote The Death and Life of Great American Cities, her ideas about what makes a healthy, vibrant, and successful city have significantly influenced planning and urban design practices across the globe. Jacobs herself has become a mythic — some might even say sacred — icon credited for turning the planning profession on its head. But as cities continue to grow and evolve, in size, population, and complexity, it is incumbent on us to take a critical look at the influence of Jacobs’ work, including where it may fall short and its relevance in today’s world. On Thursday, February 9, the Daniels Faculty presents Jane Jacobs, Undone as part of the Daniels Fora series. Moderated by Dean Richard Sommer, this debate will feature Timothy Mennel, a senior editor for the American Planning Association (and co-editor of the books Reconsidering Jane Jacobs, Green Community, and Block by Block: Jane Jacobs and the Future of New York), and Margaret Crawford, a professor and scholar known for her work on Everyday Urbanism, a concept that encourages the close investigation and empathetic understanding of the specifics of daily life as the basis for urban theory and design. Featuring Timothy Mennel and Margaret Crawford Date: Thursday, February 9 Stage furnishings provided by Herman Miller. This is a public event. Tickets are required and available through: Please note: While attendance is free, tickets are required for this event. Due to the overwhelming response to past lectures, tickets will be honoured until 6:15 PM. If you have not arrived by 6:15 PM, your reservation may be filled by guests on our waiting list. | |||||||||||
2. Meanings in Architecture: The Early Works of George Baird 1957-1993
The John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design is pleased to invite you to the opening of the exhibition "Meanings in Architecture: The Early Works of George Baird 1957-1993." | |||||||||||
3. Toronto Tall Buildings Report moving Forward
The Downtown Tall Buildings Report and Downtown Tall Buildings Vision and Performance Standards Guidelines (Attachments 1 through 7 of the Report) have been posted on the City of Toronto website. The Report is scheduled to be before Toronto and East York Community Council on The following links have been provided for your convenience: February 27, 2012 Report from the Director, Community Planning, Toronto and East York District and the Director, Urban Design - Downtown Tall Buildings Project - Consultant's Study, Public Consultation and Implementation: http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2012/te/bgrd/backgroundfile-44938.pdf Attachments to the Report - Downtown Tall Buildings Project - Consultant's Study, Public Consultation and Implementation: http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2012/te/bgrd/backgroundfile-44939.pdf Editor's Note: ACO has had a strong interest in this because of the need to protect heritage views in downtown Toronto, in particular those of the Ontario Legislative Assembly | |||||||||||
| NEWS | ACTION : Issue No 191 February 2, 2012 | |||||||||||
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4. Building Stories: The Beginning of a Canadian Heritage Spring
Robert Shipley described the latest collaboration from the University of Waterloo’s Heritage Resource Centre as the beginning of heritage spring for Canada, and he may well be right.
The intended goal is to identify and record heritage buildings. The fields reflect that focus, but a building does not have to have formal heritage status to be added. Data can be added by anyone. The minimum entry is an address and a photograph, but there are also ways to add reports, heritage statements, to group and search properties by any of the fields in the database. It is also possible for organizations to control a slice of data that is theirs, that only the organization can edit, but which others can comment on. The different slices could be entered and displayed through separate portals, but will agglomerate into a nationwide database. The Toronto Architectural Conservancy will likely be moving ahead with developing a Toronto portal.
One of the biggest challenges to be overcome is the current look of the website. It was explained the rather pedestrian graphics are limited to some extent by the standards of the granting organizations. For example making it accessible to the blind eliminates being able to use java script. As well, the logo for Building Stories is made up of sketches of 19th century buildings, none bigger than two stories. For those from Toronto it would be necessary to create an access portal that reflects a much more varied building stock, as well as an additional century of construction. Nonetheless, the biggest part of the work has been developed in the site’s backend, and it is very attractive to partner with the Building Stories to capitalize on that.
Questions? Please contact Project Coordinator, Kayla Jonas at kajonas@uwaterloo.ca. | ||||||||||
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5. 100 Main Street West: We deserve a better solution
blogpost on potential demolition of Hamilton Board of Education building | ||||||||||
6. Town's Heritage Consultant Validates ACO Collingwood's Position on Admiral Colllingwood Development
Media Release January 30, 2012
In each and every one of these planning tools, the proposed development is deemed contrary to, or inconsistent with the policy. Remarkably, even the Growth Plan, often cited by the proponents of the development, does not support the project as proposed. Wayne Morgan notes;
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7. HCF Launches New Website www.heritagecanada.org
Ottawa, Ontario, January 31, 2012 — Heritage Canada Foundation (HCF), with the support of the Canadian Forum for Public Research on Heritage, is pleased to announce the launch of a new and improved website, www.heritagecanada.org, a rich resource for members, advocates, news media, decision makers and individual Canadians. | |||||||||||
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8. Moriyama Teshima Office Going Down
Take a last look at Raymond Moriyama's office building on Davenport before it is torn down for. I had a call from Mr. Nugent, a neighbour that the demolition hoardings are going up. Mr. Nugent feels strongly that this building should have been protected for posterity, and he is right in recognizing its significance. The situation is not dissimilar to the case that was made for the Lyle office at 1 Bedford. Another important, yet unprotected important building is disappearring from the Toronto landscape. Mr Nugent is disappointed that others did not step forward to list or designate the property. On the other hand, one has to respect the decision of the Moriyama family to sell the property for redevelopment, in so doing the architect who designed it is saying he does not wish this work preserved, that the building has served its purpose. The Moriyama family have opened the building to the public nearly every year since Doors Open began, allowing all those who did visit to remember it. I would be interested to get feedback from readers. | ||||||||||
| LINKS : Issue No 191 February 2, 2012 | |||||||||||
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9. BlogTO: Fire losses in Toronto
Top 10 buildings lost to fire in Toronto Looking back at the irreplaceable buildings we've lost in Toronto — Trinity College, Chorley Park, The Grand Opera House, to name a few — it's clear we only have ourselves to blame. A lack of conservation policy, a misguided attempt at improvement or simple neglect has sent many a worthy building the way of the wrecking ball. Occasionally, though, disaster intervenes and buildings are taken from us against our will. As a sort of depressing companion to last year's top 10 buildings lost to demolition in Toronto, here's a look at the best buildings, in no particular order, snatched away by fire. | ||||||||||
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10. BlogTO: History of the Dufferin Gates Toronto
A brief history of the Dufferin Gate at the CNE grounds Over the last 133 years the Canadian National Exhibition has evolved from a travelling agricultural show into Canada's largest fair, the one and only "Ex." Once the main entrance to the exhibition grounds, the Dufferin Gate at the foot of Dufferin Street has welcomed excited visitors to a world of innovative, thrilling, ingenious and bizarre exhibits for over well over a century. The original Dufferin Gate was built in 1895, seventeen years after the first permanent exhibition was held on the site, to serve as the principal route into the exhibition grounds. The area in front of the small wooden structure served as a natural meeting place for groups preparing the enter the Ex. In the first years of the 20th century major renovations at the exhibition grounds added several new structures — including Manufacturers' Building in 1902, Art Gallery and Administration Building in 1905, Horticultural Building in 1907, Railways Building in 1908 and Government Building in 1911 - reflecting the increasing popularity of the annual show. | ||||||||||
11. Globe and Mail: European Meats in Kensington Market
Kensington Market stalwart is on the block For more than five decades, European Quality Meats and Sausages has been a Kensington Market mainstay, drawing customers from across the city with hearty steaks, spicy kielbasa and tangy cured ham. But now, septuagenarian founder Morris Leider is contemplating closing the business, the latest sign of a slow shift in the retail makeup of the colourful enclave. Editor's Note: The Market is a National Historic Site. This building is not culturally significant in the conventional sense, but its use is such a strong part of Kensington traditions of unique independent businesses. | |||||||||||
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12. Globe and Mail: Ryerson Architecture App for Toronto???
Phone app brings Toronto architecture to life It is, perhaps, the most memorable scene from the 2002 sci-fi flick Minority Report: performing a sort of upper-body ballet, Tom Cruise whips through pages of information, fast-forwards through video and enlarges stills on transparent computer screens using two-fingered, light-tipped gloves. Less than a decade later, some of that fiction would become reality when Apple’s finger-flicking-good iPhone was launched and, a few years after that, a popular video game system would do away with joysticks to transform player into controller. But for Luddites, or those not inclined to pantomime skiing or auto racing in their living rooms, there has been little incentive to embrace this somewhat intimidating new technology. Until now: Recently released by Ryerson University, a free app for iPhones and Android phones uses geo-positioning for an interactive downtown architectural experience like no other. Hold the phone in front of you, and the phone’s camera shows the view in real time; “floating” on top of that view are photographs of architectural landmarks in close proximity. Walk towards a landmark and its photo grows larger in a modern-day version of the “You’re getting warmer” game; tap that photo and layers of information appear. In some cases, it’s an archival photograph of what occupied the site a century ago; or floor plans and concept sketches; in all cases, the Ryerson app will deliver text information on the building explaining why it’s significant. Editor's Note: Maddening no info on where to download app.... | ||||||||||
13. Toronto Blog: Mapping Toronto at Koffler Gallery
Mapping the unmappable history of Toronto "This river I step in is not the river I stand in." That line will likely ring familiar to most Toronto folk who've crossed the Queen Street Viaduct heading east across the Don River. Added to the structure by Eldon Garnet during a renovation effort in the mid-1990s, its thoroughly Heraclitean sentiment is a little reminder of the flux that surrounds us regardless of whatever efforts we might make to suppress the passage of time. It also happens to sum up one of the dominant ideas that Toronto artist Flavio Trevisan explores in his latest show, "Museum of the Represented City." http://www.kofflerarts.org/Programs/Event-Detail/?recordid=172 | |||||||||||
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14. Toronto Star: Faking Destruction of Heritage Buildings
Booming house explosion in Clarington part of video shoot A half-dozen firefighters, a pumper truck, a fire chief, and an officer from the Durham police explosives unit were the scene of a massive house explosion in Clarington on Sunday. No one was injured. In fact, despite the thundering boom and the cloud of thick, black smoke, the dilapidated two-storey house didn’t fall down, or even catch fire. That’s because the special effects technicians that staged the blast used more explosives than fuel. “It packed the same punch, just less of a fireball,” said James Sled, a special effects coordinator for NEXUS Canada. The spectacle was rumoured to be part of an Our Lady Peace video shoot. High winds forced technicians to scale back the blast at the Holt Rd. home, but the movie stunt could still be seen from more than two-and-a-half kilometres away. The abandoned house, which was scheduled for demolition Tuesday, was loaded with seven explosive devices on the main floor and five on the top floor, said Sled. Editor's Note: Not sure I see much fun in this video, but interesting nonetheless. House escapes the blast, but will be destroyed very soon. Can readers fill in on why this lovely building is going down? | ||||||||||
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15. Toronto Star: Odette House - Demolition of historic Toronto house has locals fuming
The “hurried’’ demolition of a 1800s-era downtown house that a Toronto councillor asked to have designated a heritage building, has angry local residents and businesses wondering who would want it torn down. “At least they could have saved the architectural details and donated them instead of throwing them in a dumpster,’’ says a frustrated Sonja Scharf, who operates a business near 81 Wellesley St. E., which was the site of Odette House, an old two-storey home with a coach house in the back. The property, near Church St., used to be owned by the Toronto office of Wellspring, a charitable organization that provides support to people with cancer. Wellspring sold the building in September for $4.5 million because the organization lacked the funds to do upkeep on the building, needed more space, and because the house presented accessibility issues. Wellspring has moved some of its programming to Women’s College Hospital, and is looking for a new home. After the building was sold local city councillor Kristyn Wong-Tam wrote a letter to city staff in November asking that Odette House be designated a heritage property. But unbeknownst to her a demolition permit was issued Dec. 14. A demolition crew – Lions Demolition—went in last week Wednesday and began tearing down the rear of the property.
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16. Toronto Star: Real Jerk fights back
The Real Jerk plans to fight its eviction The owners of the Real Jerk restaurant have hired a lawyer to fight their Jan. 31 eviction date. Co-owner Ed Pottinger says lawyer Albert Formosa is planning to apply for an injunction to delay the eviction from their Queen and Broadview location. “I’d prefer to sit back and relax and run my restaurant,” said 55-year-old Pottinger, “but if it means it may be taken away from me, you’ve got to get savvy quick and come out swinging.” Since Pottinger received the eviction notice from Bill Mandelbaum, president of Buckingham Properties and owner of the property, on Dec. 30, he has orchestrated an aggressive campaign to stay in the location that has galvanized his patrons and the community. Editor's Note: Interesting situation.....commercial tenants have few rights once a lease expires | |||||||||||
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17. Urban Toronto: Rezoning application - 60 Mill Street Gansevoort Hotel and Condos over Rack House at Distillery District
Editor's Note: You be the judge, but this seems a pretty crazy scheme to me. Many in Toronto are excited about Montreal firm Saucier and Perotte designing in Toronto. Interesting new building, but not much left of the historic Rack House. Perhaps we are so numbed to seeing such disjunctures in Toronto's urban fabric we are willing to tolerate it in a National Historic Site. It has definitely become the dominant urban form in T.O. There was a public meeting on this last week. Attendee Cory Lemos reports a general concern about the approach, varying from "wrong building, wrong place", issues about lack of parking (yawn) to suggestions for a follow up public meeting for suggestions about how to be more respectful to the original building. A declaration of interest here, my husband's firm DTAH did the planning for the Distillery District in the 90's. That planning called for infill scaled to the historic buildings, preserving views from the main square. That plan has been largely ignored since then, but it is not clear if there are any ground rules in place now. | ||||||||||
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18. e-architect: Adaptive Re-use Montreal Stewart Museum Montreal, January 27, 2012 - The Arsenal at the Fort on Île Sainte-Hélène, a warehouse for training ammunition and guns, built Between 1820 and WAS 1824 and WAS Converted Into a military museum in 1956. The Stewart Museum HAS large collection of over 30.000 objects and artifacts of New France and the European influence in North America. | ||||||||||
19. Atlantic Weekly: The Greenest Building is.....
Why the Most Environmental Building is the Building We've Already Built Reusing an old building pretty much always has less of an impact on the environment than tearing it down, trashing the debris, clearing the site, crafting new materials and putting up a replacement from scratch. This makes some basic sense, even without looking at the numbers. But what if the new building is super energy-efficient? How do the two alternatives compare over a lifetime, across generations of use? “We often come up against this argument that, ‘Oh well, the existing building could never compete with the new building in terms of energy efficiency,’” says Patrice Frey, the director of sustainability for the National Trust for Historic Preservation. “We wanted to model that.” Preservation Green Lab, the Trust's sustainability think tank, has published a new study today examining this that puts big numbers behind the finding that the greenest buildings aren’t in fact state-of-the-art ones; they’re the ones we already have. | |||||||||||
20. Guardian: Threat to 5Pointz
5Pointz: New Yorkers prepare to say goodbye to a slice of hip-hop history A group of rappers in puffy jackets and hoodies are being filmed jumping around in unison against a brick canvas of eye-popping red and yellow street art: a giant, leering Jim Carrey as Firemaster Bill winks out at them. A short distance away, two men admire a portrait of Jam Master Jay – the Run-DMC deejay who was murdered in his studio in 2002 – spray-painted on to the same giant warehouse of a building. This is 5Pointz. Even when closed for the winter, this rambling building in Queens – which covers almost an entire city block – attracts scores of graffiti artists, hip-hop stars and tourists. Guide books advise tourists to take the elevated 7 train, which loops around the outdoor exhibition space, bagging them two New York landmarks in one go. Three, if you count the neighbouring contemporary arts centre MoMA PS1. But this sprawling public graffiti mecca is living on borrowed time. Last March, its owner, Jerry Wolkoff, announced plans to demolish the building to make way for high-rise condos. 5Pointz, which celebrates its 10th anniversary this year, is unlikely to continue far beyond 2013. But Wolkoff's plan, say artists and community activists, will not only destroy an important hip-hop landmark, but the vibrant artistic community of Long Island City – one of the largest in New York – along with it. Editor's Note: Here is where the heritage systems fail. We have a hard time dealing with places that even though they are important to people, memory, sense of place, culture of a people, they don't fit the prevailing focus on architectural landmarks. Ned Kaufman makes the case for change in his book Place, Race and Story, a must read on the subject. | |||||||||||
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21. Scotsman: New Entrance to Edinburgh's Waverly Station
Waverley Steps: Walk this way for Edinburghs new rail gateway THE train may take the strain, but getting to the station has been a daunting struggle for generations of Edinburgh passengers. The Waverley Steps, the notorious principal entrance to the capital’s railway hub, provided a 72-step nightmare – especially in the wind and rain. However, weary travellers will heave a sigh of relief on Monday when they are able to glide up to Princes Street on escalators under a glass roof for the first time in 145 years. The year-long construction is being completed on time, albeit five years after it should have originally been finished because of delays caused by objections to the scheme. However, station owner Network Rail also warned that the new roof, which is supported by six tree-like pillars, would not remove the steps’ wind-tunnel effect completely.
Editor's Note: I studied for a year in Edinburgh, one of the most interesting years of my life. The way the train integrates into the city is really quite wonderful. If you ever get the chance to visit, don't miss it, and do think of taking the train in and out of the city, it is one of the most spectacular arrivals in any city. | ||||||||||
22. The Atlantic Cities: Ontario's Places to Grow Plan
Can Ontario Really Deliver North America's Best Smart Growth Plan? Kaid Benfield is the director of the Sustainable Communities and Smart Growth program at the Natural Resources Defense Council, co-founder of the LEED for Neighborhood Development rating system, and co-founder of Smart Growth America. | |||||||||||
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23. The Times: Wonder of ancient city reduced to rubble
Under cover of the Chinese new year holiday and armed only with hand tools, a demolition team moved quietly into a narrow Beijing alley and razed one of the capital’s few remaining ancient courtyards. | ||||||||||
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24. Wall Street Journal: Recalling Art Deco Stylist Who Defined City The spectacular architectural decorations of Hildreth Meière live on in landmarks across the country—from the medallions on the façade of Radio City Music Hall to the floors and ceilings of the Nebraska State Capitol.
But even in New York, where she based her career and her Art Deco style became one of the city's signature visual motifs, Ms. Meière's name has faded into obscurity since her death in 1961. Now, Ms. Meière's work is being celebrated with an exhibit opening Friday at the Museum of Biblical Art, called "Walls Speak: The Narrative Art of Hildreth Meière." The show, which opened in St. Bonaventure, N.Y., in 2009 and went to the National Building Museum in Washington D.C., last year, displays the pioneering work of a woman who, beginning in the 1920s, completed more than 100 architectural commissions. | ||||||||||
| SUPPORT : Issue No 191 February 2, 2012 | |||||||||||
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| CONTACT : Issue No 191 February 2, 2012 | |||||||||||