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Issue No 108 December 11, 2007
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FEATURE STORIES:
1. TSA Rant Evening
IN THIS ISSUE: EVENTS submit an event
1. TSA Rant Evening
NEWS | ACTION submit a news or action item
6. David Miller Talks Heritage
LINKS submit a link
13. insideToronto.com: Community council clears Cabbagetown conservation Northwest segment of area close to receiving heritage designation
DOES ANYBODY KNOW? submit a link 35. Source of Funding to Restore St. Thomas Railway Station SUPPORT 36. Support Built Heritage News
CONTACT
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| EVENTS : Issue No 108 December 11, 2007 | |||||||||||
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All Welcome for the third annual evening of rants, where known and not so well known architects and friends turn their minds in a tongue in cheek way to the issues of the day. | ||||||||||
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Mark the shortest day of the year with a cosy evening of music and stories at Spadina. James Thompson will provide an engaging program of flute music while the Katari Storytellers will enthrall with Japanese stories and song. It is recommended that tickets be purchased in advance as seating is limited. Refreshments are included. | ||||||||||
3. A Work in Progress Preserving Toronto's Architectural Record
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4. Restoring Grand Heritage: A Six Nations Perspective
The Six Nations of the Grand has been an important part of the Grand River watershed's history and heritage for over 200 years. Join us on Heritage Day, Monday February, 18, 2008 to learn more about the traditions, events and influence of Six Nations on the history and development of the Grand River watershed. Special attention will be focused on the life and times of E. Pauline Johnson and the special role of the arts in promoting understanding of Six Nations culture and heritage. For more information visit www.chiefswood.com or www.grandriver.ca | |||||||||||
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5. Tomorrow's Past Matters: Investing in Heritage and Enriching Democracy
Due to a power outage in city Toronto's downtown core that affected the Elgin and Winter Garden Theatre Centre on Tuesday, November 27, 2007, "An Evening with Stephen Lewis had to be rescheduled. The event is now scheduled for Monday, January 21, 2008. Previously issued tickets are valid for the new date. If you cannot attend the rescheduled event, full ticket refunds are available by contacting Ticketmaster at 416-872-5555 or "http://www.ticketmaster.ca/">www.ticketmaster.ca The Ontario Heritage Trust is pleased to present an evening with Stephen Lewis, one of Canada's most respected commentators on social affairs, international development and human rights. At this special event, Mr. Lewis will discuss "Tomorrow's Past Matters: Investing in Heritage and Enriching Democracy. This is one in a series of events marking the 40th anniversary of the Ontario Heritage Trust, the province's lead heritage agency. Proceeds will go to the Trust';s Lincoln M. Alexander Legacy Fund in support of heritage conservation. Event sponsors are: Chubb Insurance, TD Canada Trust, 10tation Event Catering, The Amazing Food Service Inc., Daniel et Daniel Event Creation, Catering, en Ville Event Design and Catering, Ticketmaster, Core Event Staff, Exclusive Affair Rentals, Gourmet Beverage Company and Polson Pier. The Toronto Sun is the media sponsor. The Ontario Heritage Trust is dedicated to identifying, preserving, protecting and promoting Ontario's built, cultural and natural heritage for the benefit of present and future generations. Visit www.heritagetrust.on.ca for more information. | ||||||||||
| NEWS | ACTION : Issue No 108 December 11, 2007 | |||||||||||
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6. David Miller Talks Heritage
Last week a group of Toronto’s heritage advocates met with Toronto Mayor David Miller to talk about why we are still losing our heritage buildings when municipalities have the means to stop demolition. As we spoke the Bata International Building was being ripped apart. | ||||||||||
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7. Opinion: The Crystal has no Clothes
I have to confess that if I had been on the Jury for the ROM competition I would not have voted for Daniel Liebeskind’s Crystal. But as the building has evolved along Bloor street I have come to enjoy the way its reflective angled surfaces reflect the passing traffic and hubbub of Bloor, and the sparkle in the paving outside. | ||||||||||
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8. Bata Building under demolition
Just in, no details to report. Will try to add as I get them. C. The heavy machinery has started chewing up the western facade. Whoever planned the demolition did their homework. If they had started on the Don Valley Parkway side, there would have been a few rear-enders no doubt. Scott Burgess Information Coordinator Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation email: burgess@osstf.on.ca Tel: 416-751-8300 Fax: 416-751-3394 Toll Free: 1-800-267-7867 | ||||||||||
9. RCYC Votes to keep its present Building
Members of the RCYC last week turned down a proposal to demolish and Editor's Note: Can anyone clarify the position of Heritage Preservation Services on this matter? | |||||||||||
10. Appointment of Glen Murray to President and CEO of Canadian Urban Institute
1277200712November 27, 2007 | |||||||||||
11. The Banting Homestead is now protected!
11Here is an update on the Banting Homestead story. | |||||||||||
12. Donna Baker, ACO Heritage Activist has died
BAKER, Donna Marie (nee Hutchinson) 1927-2007 Died peacefully in the late afternoon on Wednesday, December 5, 2007. Beloved wife, mother, animal lover, friend, neighbour and community activist, Donna's warmth and kindness touched many. TA funeral service will be held at 3 o'clock on Tuesday, December 11th in the CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF ST. JAMES, 65 Church Street, Toronto. | |||||||||||
| LINKS : Issue No 108 December 11, 2007 | |||||||||||
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13. insideToronto.com: Community council clears Cabbagetown conservation Northwest segment of area close to receiving heritage designation
The whole of Cabbagetown is one step closer to being deemed a Heritage Conservation District after Toronto and East York Community Council approved heritage designation of the northwest section of the area for conservation Tuesday. The approved section is roughly bounded by Wellesley Street to the north, Carlton Street to the south, Sherbourne Street to the west and Parliament Street to the east. If approved at city council later this month, Cabbagetown Northwest will join Cabbagetown-Metcalfe, Cabbagetown South and Cabbagetown North as protected heritage districts. "We want to eventually have all of Cabbagetown designated as a heritage district" said George Rust-D'Eye of the Cabbagetown Preservation Association (CPA). "Three areas are already protected, but this is the first west of Parliament Street." | ||||||||||
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14. Globe and Mail: Royal Canadian Military Institute next to go
Historic military building to be razed, then rebuilt as part of new condominium The Royal Canadian Military Institute, one of the most venerable institutions on Toronto's University Avenue, is "beyond repair" and will be torn down and rebuilt as part of a new high-rise condominium. Editor's Note: A federal/provincial incentive program to assist property owners with routine maintenance costs might have saved this building. It, like so many others in Canada, is reaching the 100 year mark when repointing and other repairs become necessary. If maintained they will last indefinitely, which is generally not true for the replacement structures. | ||||||||||
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15. Toronto Star: Toronto's Evergreen Project
Project keeps nature close to city's heart While City Hall turns in ever-smaller circles, the city itself manages to move ahead regardless. | ||||||||||
16. Canadian Architect: And Justice for All - An historic courthouse facility is transformed into a contemporary judicial facility through a series of deft manipulations.
PROJECT Renfrew COUNTY COURTHOUSE, PEMBROKE, ONTARIO The oft-hermetic and intimidating courthouse is not a public building type usually associated with contributing to a sense of pride of place. However, a recent $20-million makeover to an Eastern Ontario courthouse proves that judicial facilities can indeed contribute to the public life of a community. | |||||||||||
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17. St. Thomas Times-Journal: Hopes fade for saving courthouse - Campbell fears another Alma College
Hopes for a consolidated court facility at the courthouse on Wellington Street are fading, say members of St. Thomas council. That news comes after Mayor Cliff Barwick, Ald. Gord Campbell and city clerk Wendell Graves met Nov. 27 with Chris Bentley, provincial attorney general, to discuss a proposed location for a courthouse facility to combine the physical presence of the Ontario Court of Justice and Superior Court. Earlier this year, it was announced that the province was moving up the time line for courthouse construction, with tenders going out as early as June.In August, the city threw its support behind an offer by Shmuel Farhi, owner of the courthouse on Wellington Street, to turn the historic structure over to the city, renovate it and build an addition on the south side at his own expense. The meeting with Bentley to discuss this issue, Barwick said, lasted 50 minutes and was two years in the making. | ||||||||||
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18. London Free Press: Elgin County Court House Owner fights back
Elgin courthouse in peril, warns building owner Dislike for him lies behind the province's reluctance to consolidate all its courts at the historic Elgin County Courthouse, claims the outspoken private owner of the 1853 structure. Shmuel Farhi said that's why provincial officials have changed the rules in its courts consolidation study. For the London businessperson, it's getting personal. "If they think they are short-changing Shmuel Farhi, they better think again," he said. "They are short-changing the people of St. Thomas and Elgin County." | ||||||||||
19. The Independent Online (Brighton) : A time for reflection
Starting in January, the town of Brighton will make an early start on preparations for sesquicentennial celebrations. The haste and foresight shown by the council in planning for the town's 150th anniversary in 2009 is to be applauded. It is a fine opportunity to showcase what Brighton has to offer and to come together in common enterprise. The historic occasion should also help to focus the collective mind on Brighton's evolution, to reflect on where we have been and where we are going. We need to strengthen the sense that as a community we are making active decisions about our future development and plotting the truest course. Too often in the past year we have seemed to lurch from point to point, blown from side to side by crosswinds. The destruction of the 130-year-old St. Andrew's Church on Main Street was such a moment. The newly-formed council was caught flat-footed and was singled out by the Minister of Culture for not usings its powers under the Ontario Heritage Act. | |||||||||||
20. London Free Press: City staff reject offer of Capitol site
An offer that would give London ownership of the Capitol Theatre at no cost is a bad deal, board of control was told yesterday. Shmuel Farhi, who owns the aging building that was once a downtown hotspot, is willing to give the building to the city for just a tax receipt, but senior staff say that would be fraught with trouble. "We don't think it's a building we would want to take on," Jeff Fielding, the city's chief administrative officer, said of the decrepit Dundas Street movie house. "We would get the building as it is now." Instead, staff offered two recommendations for board of control to consider, both of which might salvage the building and the heritage elements of its street-level facade. | |||||||||||
21. Caledon Citizen.com:Kerry Log House relocation
Location for Kerr Log House scrutinized Caledon councillors had some differences about where the Kerr Log House should be located after the redevelopment feasibility study was presented to them recently. The redevelopment feasibility study was prepared for the Caledon Heritage Foundation by E.R.A. Architects Inc. of Toronto. The Kerr Log House is a mid-19th century log farmhouse that was dismantled and donated to the Town of Caledon in 2001. A subcommittee of Heritage Caledon developed plans to reuse the building as a Town-wide community heritage facility. The feasibility study identified five main uses for the house and site including a cultural heritage resource and visitors centre, gallery and exhibition space, community workshop and meeting space, office and storage space, and a community commons. | |||||||||||
22. Brantford Expositor: Cockshutt Buildings Saved
Cockshutt buildings to keep heritage tag City councillors changed their mind Monday, deciding against removing the heritage designation on the Cockshutt office, warehouse and timekeeper's complex. Following a lengthy debate, council voted 8-3 against removing the designation. The vote overturned an earlier 6-5 recommendation by council's committee of the whole in favour of a resolution from Coun. Greg Martin to remove the designation. Voting against removal on Monday were Mayor Mike Hancock and councillors John Bradford, Jennifer Kinneman, John Sless, Dan McCreary, James Calnan, Richard Carpenter and Vince Bucci. Still in favour of "de-designation"were councillors Mark Littell, Marguerite Ceschi-Smith and Martin. The change of heart occurred because Hancock, Carpenter and Bradford switched sides. The vote came after presentations by heritage advocate Anne Westaway and Bill Cockshutt, a great-grandson of Ignatius Cockshutt, who founded the company that become a Canadian farm machinery manufacturing giant. Editor's Note: Nice work. Thanks to those who supported the efforts to save this building in Brantford, including Hamilton ACO and Heritage Canada. | |||||||||||
23. Waterloo Record: Charity hopes to save historic barn
Time running out on historic barn Charity has until Dec. 31 to raise funds needed to restore building CAMBRIDGE - There's new hope for a landmark barn that has survived 160 years but is steadily decaying. An environmental charity hopes to restore the barn and make it part of an outdoor education centre. It would be used to help teach students about land use, water quality, agriculture and the environment | |||||||||||
24. Canadian Architect: Edmonton's Capital
Without understanding the city's Modernist heritage, a clear vision for promoting quality urban design in Edmonton will be difficult Edmonton is in the midst of another oil- and gas-inspired boom. Like past booms, it has become a period of prolific building. But when compared to the Modern architecture built in the period of the 1940s to the 1970s, it is hard-pressed to match the quality of design produced from that era. By examining the work of the past in relation to the current climate of architecture, one can make inferences for guiding future architecture. | |||||||||||
25. Canadian Architect: As Good as New?
The ongoing Calgary building boom is destroying much of that city's heritage. Unfortunately, many new projects are attempting to replicate historic buildings through an invented historicism As Canadian cities rapidly intensify their historic urban cores, questions about the fit of new buildings in historic districts become increasingly relevant. Historicist buildings that seek to mimic old styles in order to "fit" into their surroundings highlight whether redeveloped urban neighbourhoods are becoming authentic expressions of our time. Nowhere is this issue more apparent than in Calgary's booming Beltline district, where several new developments have sparked heated debate about the merit of historicist design. | |||||||||||
26. Halifax Chronicle Herald: The debate about combining old and new
For a city with the best of old and new, look to Bologna Beautiful heritage buildings and skyscrapers: Can they co-exist in a city? Or are they mutually exclusive? The recent debate in Halifax seems to run on the assumption that you must have either one or the other. But if we look at many European cities, we can see that heritage and modernity are not necessarily at odds. A thriving city can have both. | |||||||||||
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27. Globe and Mail: Erickson's Graham House At Risk
Landmark Erickson house to be demolished VANCOUVER -- A demolition permit is expected to be issued this week, possibly as early as today, for an Arthur Erickson-designed house in West Vancouver. The David Graham House, completed in 1963, helped kick-start Erickson's auspicious career. Set dramatically on a cliff"like a ladder," the house is multilevelled, with overlapping roofs and stacking terraces." The living room is a hovering glass platform with marvellous twisted pines clinging to the rock around "; Erickson wrote in his 1975 book The Architecture of Arthur Erickson. "The master bedroom hangs over the sea and its bathroom opens on submarine windows into the swimming pool." Erickson has credited the Graham House with launching his reputation as"the architect you went to when you had an impossible site." But in recent years, the house has fallen into a desperate state of disrepair. "Every beam is twisting and buckling, apparently," says West Vancouver Mayor Pamela Goldsmith-Jones. Along with the Arthur Erickson Conservancy, Goldsmith-Jones has been exploring options to try to save the structure, but she admits that's unlikely. | ||||||||||
28. Vancouver Province: Erickson house faces wrecking ball - Renowned Vancouver architect launched his reputation with 1963 home
The owner of an Arthur Erickson-designed West Vancouver home is continuing with his plans to demolish the landmark. Shiraz Lalji has applied to the District of West Vancouver for a demolition permit because the house, which is unoccupied, has not been maintained and he says it is in a state of severe disrepair. The plan, according to the district, is to build a new house on the site. | |||||||||||
29. Saskatoon Star Phoenix: Goodbye Barry Hotel
Controversy checks in at Barry Heritage group wants founding site of FSIN saved, not razed, by city The heritage community in Saskatoon says it's "premature" for city council to raze the Barry Hotel. "There hasn't been time for council to get enough information to make a vote" said Victoria Neufeldt, president of the Saskatoon Heritage Society. The city doesn't even own the hotel yet; however, city council will vote on whether to demolish it tonight. | |||||||||||
30. Globe and Mail: Salvager and Scavengers in Vancouver
The fine line between salvager and scavenger Growing trade in legally rescued antique building fixtures has spawned a black market in stripped materials In late 2003, John Atkin walked into an abandoned old house in Strathcona, carrying the tools required to salvage rare ornamental door trim for reuse in his own home renovation. Hearing loud crashing noises upstairs, Mr. Atkin followed the sound and came face to face with a man armed with a crowbar, who was smashing through valuable mouldings to remove $3 pulleys from an old sash window."These are mine," said the man before resuming. The two occupants of the derelict house represent the good and bad sides of Vancouver's growing trade in salvaged building parts. On one hand, there was Mr. Atkin, a Vancouver historian and heritage advocate with permission to enter, and on the other, a man willing to risk a breaking-and-entering charge to profit from a quick smash and grab. | |||||||||||
31. New York Sun:Pennies To Build, Millions To Restore
In the 1950s and the early 1960s, Yale University commissioned buildings from a handful of the most important modern American architects: Louis Kahn, Eero Saarinen, Gordon Bunshaft, and Paul Rudolph. Now Yale finds itself at the forefront of a movement to restore modernist buildings to their original glory and bring them up to contemporary environmental standards. | |||||||||||
32. Washington Post: The tired debate about property rights in heritage areas rears its head
Heritage Areas vs. Property Rights - With Designations on Rise, Conservatives Sound Alarm A new front has opened in the long-simmering dispute between conservationists and property-rights activists as Congress has increasingly given federal protection to lands dubbed "National Heritage Areas" With no official formula for their creation, the areas are designated by congressional action and overseen primarily by private, nonprofit community groups. The nonprofits also have roles in managing land use in the areas, which range from a section of abandoned steel mills on a riverfront in Scranton, Pa., to a stretch of the Hudson River between New York City and Albany. But historical preservationists are encountering opposition from conservative activists, who see the rapid growth in congressionally created heritage areas as a backdoor way to restrict property owners' rights to develop their land as they see fit. National Heritage Areas "pose a threat to private property rights through the exercise of restrictive zoning that may severely limit the extent to which property owners can develop or use their property," wrote Cheryl Chumley and Ronald D. Utt of the Heritage Foundation in a recent report on heritage areas. Chumley and Utt said such "regulatory takings" through zoning are the "most common form of property rights abuse today". Republicans in Congress and property activists say that individuals who own land in these heritage areas now have to answer to a quasi-governmental body about how they develop their property. Editor's Note: Is anyone forced to buy there? Or forced to enjoy the increased property values that occur in heritage areas? I am amazed there are still people in the U.S., where the evidence of the benefits of Historic Districts are so strong, who trot out these dumb arguments. In New York, communities are fighting to get District status. In other parts of the U.S. anti poverty groups fight districts because of their gentrifying effects. | |||||||||||
33. Washington Times: Modernism worthy of preserving
Saving the recent past has become preservationists' latest battle cry as development pressures increasingly threaten modern architecture with demolition. Steel and concrete structures representing the design ethos of the 1960s and '70s are just as deserving of restoration as older buildings but harder to protect from the wrecker's ball. | |||||||||||
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34. Expatica Spain - Expatica.com: Calatrava loses Bilbao Intellectual Property fight Calatrava loses legal fight over Bilbao work of art The city council of Bilbao modified a"singular work of art"without even consulting its creator - but the latter's claim to intellectual property gives way to the higher public interest. With this argument, Judge Edmundo Rod Achtecgui of Section 1 of the Mercantile Court of Bilbao has dismissed a suit filed by Valencian architect Santiago Calatrava against the city council of Bilbao and two construction firms. Calatrava brought the action after a walkway extension was added to his well-known bridge over the River Ria, nicknamed the Zubi Zuri. | ||||||||||
| DOES ANYBODY KNOW? : Issue No 108 December 11, 2007 | |||||||||||
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35. Source of Funding to Restore St. Thomas Railway Station
Editor's Note: St. Thomas seems to have more than its share of heritage challenges. Hope someone can help here. | ||||||||||
| SUPPORT : Issue No 108 December 11, 2007 | |||||||||||
Cheques are payable to: | |||||||||||
| CONTACT : Issue No 108 December 11, 2007 | |||||||||||