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Issue No 149 October 15, 2009
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FEATURE STORIES: 1. Architectural Conservancy of Ontario Awards Dinner IN THIS ISSUE: EVENTS submit an event 1. Architectural Conservancy of Ontario Awards Dinner NEWS | ACTION submit a news or action item 10. Vaughan's First Heritage Easement LINKS submit a link 18. Alliston Herald: Editorial - Don't forget the heritage SUPPORT 43. Support Built Heritage News
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| EVENTS : Issue No 149 October 15, 2009 | |||||||||||
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1. Architectural Conservancy of Ontario Awards Dinner
Awards will be given to people from all across Ontario who continue to do the extraordinary to preserve our landmarks. This is always a lovely evening, a chance to relax in one of Toronto's most convivial spaces. This is also the most important fundraising event for the biggest, fastest growing heritage organization in Ontario.
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2. U of T Lecture
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3. Windows Conservation for Historic Places
This workshop will provide an overview to the maintenance and repair of historic wooden and metal windows, including inspection, diagnosis and conservation; performance and life cycle costing; security and protection. Day two will feature a variety of hands-on demonstrations of tools and techniques for the repair and maintenance of historic windows.
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4. City of Waterloo 'Museum' finds new home in Urban Mall expansion !
Story of Mall renovations via the Record !
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5. Community Consultation about the Canada Malting Silos
Councillor Adam Vaughan invites you to attend this public meeting to provide your feedback about the future of the Canada Malting Silos.
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6. Ghosts of the Garrison Tour
Tour the grounds of Fort York at night, and hear stories from some ghostly visitors. Great fun for the family, but not too spooky for the younger crowd. Suggested for 5 years of age and up.
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7. Torontos Design Pioneers
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8. North York Modernish Architecture Forum
You are invited to a free public Forum to raise awareness and increase appreciation of Modernist Architecture in North York and the opportunities and challenges to preserving this legacy Moderator Matthew Blackett, Editor, Spacing Magazine Panel Lloyd Alter, President. Architectural Conservancy of Ontario (ACO) Leo deSorcy, Program Manager, Urban Design, North York District, City Planning Division, City of Toronto Dave LeBlanc, Globe and Mail columnist Kim Storey, Principal, Brown + Storey Architects Inc. Partners and Sponsors: City of Toronto - Special Heritage Community Event Fund E.R.A. Architects Heritage Toronto North York Community Preservation Panel Displays North York Community Preservation Panel, North Toronto Historical Society, North York Historical Society and City of Toronto 2009 Urban Design Awards Refreshments and exhibits available from 6.30pm Nearest Subway station - North York Centre on the Yonge Eglinton line Pay parking is available at a parking lot on the west side of Beecroft Avenue
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9. Rally in Shakespeare
The Lincoln & Continental Owners Club issues an invitation to attend the October 17th Rally in Shakespeare, Ontario in support of preserving the village. The Ontario Ministry of Transport proposes towiden the highway through the village in order to expedite traffic flow between Stratford and New Hamburg. This widening threatens between fifteen and twenty-five significant buildings with demolition. The consequence will be the destruction of the village. Villagers propose that a by-pass around the village be explored.
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| NEWS | ACTION : Issue No 149 October 15, 2009 | |||||||||||
10. Vaughan's First Heritage Easement
"The City of Vaughan has its first ever Heritage Easement"
Editor's Note: This was submitted by Mr. Greco, who is named as the developer of the property in the piece. The property has been hotly contested for some time, and was subject to an important OMB decision in February that ruled that the property was subject to the HCD guidelines even though the HCD plan was passed pre-2005. BHN would be interested in a piece written by area residents, has the HCD plan done its job here? What is the community reaction to the settlement? |
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11. Community Effort Puts Cabbagetown's Victorian Plan to Better Use
Coinciding with the 175th anniversary of Torontos incorporation of 1834, The Cabbagetown Preservation Association's Laneway Naming and Signing Initiative of 2006, in collaboration with elected officials and staff of the City of Toronto, are in the process of signing 52 previously unnamed laneways in today's Cabbagetown neighborhood (bounded at the north by Bloor Street East, at the south by Shuter Street, at the west by Sherbourne Street and at the east by Bayview Avenue).
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12. Stephen Otto: More to Celebrate
On Tuesday night there were two standing ovations and lots of other applause and best wishes for Stephen Otto as he received a Special Achievement Award from Heritage Toronto. Speaker after speaker spoke to all the reasons, his extraordinary knowlege, his perseverance, discreet effectiveness and generosity. The ceremony was emotionally charged as friends applauded both his accomplishments and his presence there after a long illness. At the Heritage Canada event two weeks earlier where he received the Lieutenant Governor's award Mr. Otto acknowleged that he had nearly "bought the farm" in February. HIs recovery shows a perseverance of a very different kind. For the many, many fans of Stephen Otto I have some very good news. Steve Otto's doctors have given him a clean bill of health following his treatment for Hodgkin's lymphoma for the last seven months, so now he can concentrate on rebuilding his strength and stamina. Yahoo!
Editor's Note: I am a very lucky woman. In the past year three of the most important people in my life, my husband Robert Allsopp, and our friends Stephen Otto and John Sewell have all recovered from cancer. A hat trick of a different sort performed by the excellent doctors at the University Health Network. I have just signed up once more for the Ride to Conquer Cancer on June 12 and 13 as a way of paying back. |
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13. OMB Unbowed: Standing Committee Review
Readers will recall a special notice that went out in August advising of a review of the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) by the Standing Committee on Agencies Boards and Commissions on September 8, 2009. The Hansard transcript makes for interesting reading if you are trying to understand OMB decisions on heritage matters. First the good news. Even though no heritage organizations were invited to speak to the committee, heritage was definitely on the agenda for committee members.
He responded “I believe the board has the ability to weigh evidence on a number of matters of expertise. As a lawyer, I don't have expertise in hydrology or engineering, but I'm able to call evidence about that, and the board every day is weighing expert testimony and judging it: Later he continued, “If I may say, if there is a failure in the heritage aspect of matters, I don't think it's in the board's appreciation of heritage matters. I believe it's in perhaps some inherent weaknesses in the Ontario Heritage Act that perhaps don't put heritage matters on the plane that some of these individuals would like to have them. I think the board is working properly within the milieu of what the Ontario Heritage Act says. I think those complaining may want that act actually toughened.”
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14. Letter to the Editor: Disastrous State of the Alma College Property
The Alma property still proudly displays a plaque from the Ontario Heritage Foundation unveiled October 28, 1976. The Plaque is poised in front of the rubble. There has been no clean up at the Alma site since the fire, the chapel is open to the elements with gapping holes in the roof from the fire. The OMB decision allowed for the demolition of the original structure and recommended replication of the front facade. The OMB decision is still unregistered. No sign of a “Minimum Property Standards” bylaw from St. Thomas City Council. In a letter to the editor Lara Masur Leitch, Vice-principal and former President of the Alma College International Alumnae Association stated, the blame for the destruction of this fine building should also be laid at the feet of others. Leitch added, who will step forward to save what remains? Who will rise to the challenge to rebuild on the ashes of history? How long will the horror that occurred lay abandoned at the end of Moore Street? I live at the gates of the Alma property. Tourists visit the property everyday, some walk around the property; some take pictures all shake their heads in disbelief. I have been asked “How could this have happened”? I say, “Under the watchful eyes of many”.
Editor's Note: Following the sentencing of two youth for arson in the disastrous fire of 2008. |
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15. Carlos Garcia Confirmed as Regional Councillor for St. Catharines
On Thursday, October 1st, the Council of the Region of Niagara confirmed the appointment of Carlos to fill the vacancy left by the sad passing of Councillor Michael Collins. In Carlos' words: "It is an honour to have been recommended by St. Catharines City Council to represent our City at Regional Council and to have that recommendation ratified by this Regional Council." As you know, he has worked hard for years as a volunteer on behalf of our citizens and I know will continue to work at the Region with the same commitment and dedication to further the goals of our City and Region. Please join me in congratulating him.
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16. Coalition Opposes Next Stage of Convention Centre Proposal
Press Release Coalition Opposes Next Stage of Convention Centre Proposal Halifax, NS- The Coalition to Save the View is dismayed to learn today that the provincial government has joined HRM in moving forward with the convention centre proposal. The province is signalling its willingness to spend public money on a private project by asking Rank Group to prepare a detailed proposal for the new centre. Rank has suggested building two towers of 14- and 18- storeys on the site. "The towers Rank has proposed would block out a substantial sweep of the view from Citadel Hill," said Peggy Cameron of the Coalition. "Most of the world-renowned view of George's Island would be lost to the 800,000 residents and tourists who take in the view from Citadel Hill each year and who patronize downtown hotels, restaurants and bars." Supporters of the Rank Group proposal state that the towers would not impinge on protected viewplanes. "People don't go to Citadel Hill to see the viewplanes, they go to see the view," said Ms. Cameron. "We would hope that the government considers the value of the view to the public and the economy and does not use public money to sacrifice the view to a private developer." Recently the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal ruled that current HRM policies protect more than just viewplanes. A public survey held on May 31 showed that 91% of those polled oppose the construction of the towers. The Coalition challenges the independent consultant hired by the provincial government and HRM to do proper analyses of the ecological and financial costs of the towers and to consider the value of the world-renowned view to the local economy. Without special exemptions from HRMbyDesign as well as government financial aid these towers would be limited to 7- and 9- storeys. The Coalition to Save the View is made up of individuals and groups. For information on Save the View visit: www.savetheview.ca For high resolution images for downloading visit: www.savetheview.ca/multimedia.html Facebook site is: Help Save the View From Citadel Hill For more information contact: Beverly Miller: 429-9540
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17. Waterloo Architecture Students in Energy Solar Decathelon
The US Department of Energy Solar Decathlon on the Mall in Washington is entering the home stretch. The UW lead Team North is in fourth place at this moment. It has never been below sixth and was in first place in the early going. Track the full results, updated every 15 minutes on: http://www.solardecathlon.org/scoring/ Thanks, Rick Rick Haldenby FRAIC e: erhalden@uwaterloo.ca Si duri puer ingeni videtur
Editor's Note: Rick keeps a twitter like stream of announcements about student success coming. Proud Director! |
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| LINKS : Issue No 149 October 15, 2009 | |||||||||||
18. Alliston Herald: Editorial - Don't forget the heritage
I see our friend Wayne Hutchinson is encouraging all of us to take a concerned and responsible look at the Alliston downtown core. I applaud him and suggest we should all do the same. Many of his good suggestions are also recommended in the latest study done by Meridian. However there is one glaring omission in his plan. He never once mentions the word "heritage".
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19. blogTO: Visiting The School Of Restoration Arts At Willowbank
For those of you who've experienced an uneasy feeling when witnessing massive machinery clawing down a derelict or historic building and thought, "gee, I wish someone could have saved that," allow me to introduce you to the amazing work at the Willowbank School of Restoration Arts. Having just graduated the first class in their 3-year program, the school - despite the age of the main estate - is still very young. With only a small handful of students at the institution (of varying ages), low tuition, and a general philosophy that hands-on work is as important as theory, Willowbank is truly one of the most beautiful and unique (if somewhat esoteric) post-secondary institutions I've ever visited. The school itself is one of their major projects! The building itself has such a great many layers, it's hard to know where to begin. The current facade (pictured above) is actually the original rear, with the pillared visage being the original front (1930s and 1830s respectively). On an interesting aside, the pillars you see in the title picture are single pieces of wood! A National historic site itself, the entire building is a living, breathing, work in progress.
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20. Bracebridge Examiner: Heritage Victory in Muskoka at last Southwood Church spared
Passionate arguments to keep Southwood Church away from a bulldozer’s path have been triumphant in changing the minds of Gravenhurst town councillors, who, one month ago, slated the more than 70-year-old church for demolition. Council rescinded a previous resolution to demolish the church at their Oct. 6 meeting. The move followed presentations by Southwood residents Debbie Brady, Catherine King and Tammy Neilson, as well as municipal heritage committee chair Hank Smith, each of whom rallied to save the log church. “The community … is willing to do whatever (we) can,” said Brady, who explained that $25,000 has been pledged so far to fix and maintain the church. “We plan to form a registered non-profit or charitable organization named The Friends of Our Lady of Southwood and propose to pay for the repairs to the structure and the maintenance through donations and fundraising.” She said a Facebook group created two weeks ago now includes 185 members who oppose the demolition of the church. “I know it’s been said that very few people care about the church, but I believe that many people do not know the church’s fate,” King added. “…I believe that many people would be shocked and saddened to drive by and see this family landmark gone.”
Editor's Note: This is a real breakthrough in Muskoka, congrats to Peter Sutherland and colleagues. Heritage organizing is in its infancy here, but starting to be effective. |
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21. Georgetown Independent & Free Press: Devereaux House a finalist for Great Grant Award
Lots of things have been happening for Devereaux House in the last week and half. The Ontario Trillium Foundation announced last week that the Friends of Devereaux House and their tenants, Georgetown Soccer Club, are finalists for one of its prestigious 2009 Great Grants Awards On Monday, Wellington-Halton Hills MP Michael Chong announced a $34,000 Green Municipal Grant for the farmhouse. Tomorrow night (Thursday), Mayor Rick Bonnette will officially open Devereaux House, and then on Saturday, an open house will be held between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. for the public to see the renovated building. Devereaux House (DH), located at 11494 Trafalgar Rd. beside the Trafalgar Sports Park, is a renovated 1860s Town-owned farmhouse. Originally slated for demolition, a group of volunteers formed the non-profit group, Friends of the Devereaux House (FoDH), raised funds from a variety of sources, coaxed the services of professional trades and restored the building, demonstrating that a 19th century home can be made useful again by utilizing 21st century technology.
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22. St. Catharines Standard: Thorold still looking for use for former city hall
The future of Thorold’s former city hall remains shrouded in mystery. This after a proposal to turn the heritage building into affordable housing for seniors didn’t make the short list of projects regional officials submitted to the Canada-Ontario Affordable Housing Program in the hope of scoring a share of $1.2 billion in joint government funding for housing projects. Now Thorold council will look at other options for 8 Carleton St., which has cost more than $81,000 to maintain since the city vacated it in 2006. Mayor Henry D’Angela said interim chief administrative officer John Nicol is drafting a list of suggested uses for the building in time for council’s Oct. 20 meeting. "There will be information coming forward so council can deal with the property," D’Angela said. "As a council, we understand its importance." But D’Angela, at one time a proponent of turning the 96-year-old building into a civic centre, refused to divulge what some of those suggested uses will be.
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23. Globe and Mail: Joe Storey House in Oakville Modernism on shores of Oakville
This is about relationships. First and foremost, it's about the one between Stewart Daymond, now 80, and his friend, internationally renowned architect Joseph W. Storey, who died suddenly in 1975 at the age of 52. The two men had been neighbours in Chatham, Ont., where Mr. Storey began a successful modernist architecture practice in 1947. When Mr. Daymond's aluminum and plastics business whisked him away from his colonial-style home on Victoria Avenue - which had a rear addition designed by Mr. Storey - to an Oakville rental in the late 1960s, he began looking for a lot with the idea of hiring Mr. Storey to design a home. It wasn't a completely untested idea. Mr. Storey had already done a house for Mr. Daymond's parents and the results were impressive; also, you might say Mr. Daymond's relationship to modern architecture was a direct result of knowing Mr. Storey, who designed hundreds of buildings in Southwestern Ontario: "I didn't see anything that he'd ever done that I wasn't fond of," says Mr. Daymond.
Editor's Note: There are several other gorgeous shots on the Globe website. Joe Storey projects will be on tour in Chatham at the ACO conference in June....don't miss this rare opportunity to see the work of Ontario's best mid century architects. |
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24. Globe and Mail: Phillip Goldsmith at the Guild Inn Restoration dramas
Restoration dramas SUSAN KRASHINSKYFrom Saturday's Globe and Mail Philip Goldsmith is standing in a faux Greek amphitheatre in suburban Toronto and he's feeling mournful. What surrounds him could best be described as an architectural graveyard. Fragments of the city litter the grounds. Here, an Ionic column from the demolished Toronto registry office; there, a bas-relief of Canada's provinces from what was once the Bank of Montreal building; a little farther on, some art-deco blocks from the old Toronto Star building. "It's inspiring and saddening at the same time," the heritage architect says. "It's like walking around in a field of cadavers." The amphitheatre itself is a cement Frankenstein, built by Mr. Goldsmith in 1976 out of old stones from the Bank of Toronto headquarters. The building at King and Bay was torn down "so they could build that black modernist thing that's there now," as Mr. Goldsmith describes the TD Centre, designed by celebrated architect Mies van der Rohe. Making old buildings new again is Mr. Goldsmith's specialty. He has been the principal behind many of Toronto's high-profile (and award-winning) revitalization projects, including the National Ballet School, North Toronto Station (which now houses the Summerhill LCBO) and the Wychwood Barns. Armed with his drafting board, his pen and signature beret, he's fighting to maintain a sense of the city's age and character. "We've lost a lot of buildings," he sighs, looking around. "A lot of beautiful buildings."
Editor's Note: In a recent note Phillip Goldsmith points out the reporter's error, he is not the architect, or heritage architect for the Wychwood Barns (Joe Lobko of du Toit Allsopp Hillier, architect and ERA heritage architect. Mr. Goldsmith was involved in an early feasibility study for the project. |
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25. Globe and Mail: Toronto Urban Design Awards Tough love for Toronto architects
The coveted Toronto Urban Design Awards, dispensed by the city every two years, are usually all about celebrating what Hogtown has got in the way of metropolitan beauty and imagination. But when the 2009 prizes were handed out recently, the jury decided to take the opportunity to give us a mild scolding along with a pat on the back. We deserve both. (The awards jury, by the way, was especially impressive this year: architect, urban designer and editor of Canadian Architect Ian Chodikoff; prominent Toronto architect A. J. Diamond, and landscape architects Eha Naylor and Michael Van Valkenburgh.) The jury didn't see fit to name a winner, for example, in the important category of large public spaces, and it didn't like much of what it saw in the student category. (The latter verdict is ominous: If the kids in architecture schools aren't learning how to do effective urban design, then what good can we expect from the next generation of architects?) While acknowledging that “significant progress” has been made over the past few years in the quality of Toronto's public realm, the jury added that “many projects contained an unevenness in their approach to urban design, especially as it pertained to … landscape architecture and the buildings' treatment at the ground or street level.” Despite these and other criticisms, jurors saw a number of Toronto projects they thought strong enough to merit Awards of Excellence, the top prizes. Here are some of the winners, with jury comments. Laneway House, 40R Shaftesbury Ave. Margaret Graham and Andre D'Elia architects, superkül inc. This little residence “debunks the myth that you cannot provide a single-family home in a dense urban space. … Clad with rusted metal panels, the exterior of the building was clearly designed to exude a rough aesthetic befitting a laneway residence of this kind.” When I reviewed the handsome, 900-square-foot structure in this column last year, the architects were calling their work “the making of living space in zero-tolerance conditions.” And, indeed, the property lines and the footprint of the Victorian blacksmith's shed at the heart of the project are almost identical. Superkül's solution to the squeeze was to build upward, and carefully fit the interior elements together into a tight, unified whole. Natural light, falling from high skylights at the top of light wells, illuminates almost every cranny of the interior. Though densely composed, superkül's building is a delightfully porous fabric of light and shadow, openings and closings, that works beautifully in its laneway setting. Spire, 33 Lombard St. Peter Clewes architect, architectsAlliance This tall, modernist condominium building, clad entirely in glass, “simply understands where it is located and its purpose in the city.” It also met the jury's rigorous expectations about how a tower is supposed to behave at street level. “The north-facing grasses are healthy – except in the areas of the deepest shade – and appropriate for a reduced-light landscape design. Perhaps the designers initially wanted a single species of very hardy grass. Nonetheless, the final material palette used for the plantings remains restrained and is growing better than any other landscape the jury had visited.” But the jury did have one criticism that interestingly expressed its concerns: “There could have been some form of canopy incorporated into the project's design – the ground-floor retailers must pull down their blinds throughout most of the day to protect themselves and their goods from extreme sun, glare and solar gain.” Designers of the buildings that line our streets should take this caveat to heart, and make sure that architectural modernism works for the well-being of residents and commercial tenants alike. Tibor Kolley/THE GLOBE AND MAIL The Spire condominiums at 33 Lombard St., designed by architectsAlliance. TIBOR KOLLEY/THE GLOBE AND MAIL Mayor's Tower Renewal Opportunities Book: 1,000 sites throughout the City of Toronto E.R.A. Architects and the University of Toronto John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design This Award of Excellence, in the Vision and Masterplan category, went to a scheme that has evolved from a master's thesis by former U of T student Graeme Stewart into a powerful plan for reviving the residential towers put up in Toronto some 50 years ago. Here, as elsewhere in its deliberations, the jury paid special attention to what happens at grade. Mr. Stewart and his team at E.R.A. have envisioned public markets and agricultural plots, among other uses, on the currently bleak expanses around and between buildings. “To produce a document that makes better use of the ground plane in Toronto's inner suburbs represents a timely, responsible and strategic response to many challenges associated with the public realm,” the jury said. “Potential scenarios that include urban agriculture or public markets may not be entirely feasible as illustrated. However, to envision such positive changes for the lives of so many Torontonians is certainly deserving of an award.” * Share with friends Close Please enter a valid e-mail address Please enter a comma delimited list of valid e-mail addresses Close Join the Discussion: * Newest to Oldest
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26. Google News: Gord Miller speaks out against SLAPP suits Ont. should stop huge lawsuits to silence opposition to development: report
TORONTO — Ontario must shield residents from huge lawsuits aimed at silencing opposition to local projects if it wants to fix a land use planning system that's "hugely weighted" in favour of big developers, the province's environmental commissioner said Tuesday. The government should introduce legislation that would protect citizen groups fighting to protect natural areas from intimidating legal tactics used by developers, such as so-called SLAPP lawsuits, Commissioner Gord Miller said in his annual report. SLAPP - or Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation - are stopping local residents from participating in the planning approval process out of fear they'll be saddled with huge legal costs, he said. "They go home and sit down at the kitchen table and talk with their spouse and say, 'You know, this is what we're going to do.' And the spouse says, 'It's not worth losing our house over. Why would we put ourselves at that financial risk?"' Miller said. "So the validity of their complaint or their concern is not heard because they are silenced by the fear of economic intimidation."
Editor's Note: Such tactics have also been used against heritage advocates. Even without such tactics, the costs of defending heritage is a real challenge for community groups. |
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27. Haliburton County Echo: Historic Village Barn saved - Fire damages stores, but exterior intact
With much to be thankful for, Haliburton is rejoicing that firefighters have probably saved the life of one of the village’s few historic buildings. But it’s with heavy hearts that the owners of the businesses that made their home in the Village Barn sift through the fire-, smoke- and water-damaged building. Although the structural integrity of the building remains intact, damage from the early morning fire is estimated to be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. The Village Barn, built some time between 1896 and 1912 behind the former Grand Central Hotel, is owned by Anthony and Julie vanLieshout. In 2004 they undertook a massive renovation project to add to the front of the barn and remodel the interior. It’s in the addition that the fire started, in the part occupied by Franka’s Café.
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28. Journal of Commerce: Dominion Fairmile Construction earns accolades for high school seismic upgrades Vancouver Regional Construction Association Silver Award winner Like a very fine wine, Vancouver Technical School just keeps getting better. Since 1928 it has stood on East Broadway looking part castle, part prison and part school. A second wing was added in 1953. The fact is Van Tech began life as a technical school and was the early forerunner of todays B.C. Institute of Technology. Starting in 1916, Van Tech actually had two other locations before settling on Broadway. Over the years as BCIT took over the role as it morphed into another secondary school operated by the Vancouver School Board. Van Tech, has however, retained a heavy emphasis on technical training. By the time 2006 rolled around, the 1928 building along with the 1953 building and an attached auditorium had fallen woefully short of modern seismic standards. The school board faced a decision tear it down or upgrade it. The decision was made to upgrade. Dominion Fairmile Construction, working with Sandwell Engineering won the tender to handle the job. |
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29. National Post: Cabbagetown Lane Signs Sign, sign everywhere a sign
Some of the New Cabbagetown Lane Names: SCHAWLOW LANE named after Arthur (Bud) Schawlow, a jazz musician and physicist from Cabbagetown who won the Nobel Prize in 1981 for creating the laser with his brother-in-law. EDENSMITH LANE name after Eden Smith, Salisbury Street resident and architect who designed many of the churches in the area. YEN LANE named after J.L. (Allen) Yen, a professor of Electrical Engineering who studied digital signals communication and made significant contributions to the field.
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30. National Post: Cabbagetown Lane Signs Cabbagetown cultivates lanes
Lane-naming a tribute to 'hidden gems', noteworthy Torontonians City works crews arrived last week amid the Victorian row houses and cottages of Cabbagetown, halting their trucks at eight narrow laneways. Residents watched as they erected street signs with names like Woodward Evans Lane, after the two Torontonians who first invented the light bulb and then sold the patent to Thomas Edison; Drovers Lane, after the occupation of some early City of Toronto residents who drove herds of livestock to market; and Hagan Lane after award-winning artist Frederick Hagan, known for setting up his easel to paint in Cabbagetown's laneways. Read more: http://www.nationalpost.com/news/canada/toronto/story.html?id=2066612#ixzz0TFAMnZSA
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31. Globe and Mail: Dissing the Save St. Nick Campaign The NIMBY crusade against a Toronto condo
What, me NIMBY? Neighbourhood groups that oppose development in their backyard always deny that selfish motives play any part in their campaign against that new building, widened street or bigger power station. The Save St. Nick group is a classic example. The St. Nickers have been waging a crusade against the construction of a condo tower in their little corner of downtown Toronto. The 244-unit building would rise on quiet St. Nicholas Street, near Bloor and Yonge. Located in the heart of the city, in an area thick with new condos and apartment blocks, the development fits perfectly with the city's official plan. The plan aims to “intensify" the downtown by getting more and more people living and working in the heart of the city, making optimum use of transit and getting people out of their cars. Excellent idea in theory, say the St. Nickers. Just not in our backyard. At a committee hearing this week, they came forward to rage against the plan.
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32. National Post: Save St. Nick's Group Loses City councillors approve condo tower for historic downtown street
St. Nicholas Street, according to residents, is a beloved pedestrian corridor of Victorian row-houses, historic brick cottages and blooming front gardens – a cobbled oasis nestled between the hulking skyscrapers of Bay Street and the bustle of Yonge Street in Toronto’s core. About three dozen people came to city hall today to plead for one of downtown’s last remaining low-rise streets to be spared from a high-rise development. But Toronto and East York community council approved a 29-storey tower for the corner of St. Nicholas and St. Mary streets, reasoning the project had already been reduced from an original proposed height of 44 storeys. Councillor Kyle Rae (Toronto Centre Rosedale) sported a “Save St. Nick” button even as he overruled local objections in an area slated for greater density. “I think that this application has come a long way and is worthy of support today,” Mr. Rae said. Read more: http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/toronto/archive/2009/10/13/city-councillors-approve-condo-tower-for-historic-downtown-street.aspx#ixzz0Tzzr0wKc
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The Community Website
For the community view, and photos of the proposed development
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34. North Bay Nugget: Mattawa residents launch effort to save old hospital
MATTAWA - Town council has ensured that this community's former hospital won't be demolished overnight, deciding Tuesday to consider the building a possible heritage site. It didn't take much convincing from area residents to get municipal politicians onside trying to keep the old red brick hospital building on Third Street standing. But council didn't offer any guarantees the hospital won't be levelled later on, saying a motion adopted Tuesday simply opens the door for discussions with Conseil Scolaire Catholique Franco-Nord, which now owns the building. This council wants to do what's right,"Mayor Dean Backer told a crowd of about 50 people, most of whom showed up at the regular meeting to lobby for support to prevent the demolition of the hospital and preserve the Mattawa skyline. Council unanimously adopted a motion declaring the town's intent to investigate the former hospital as a possible heritage site, essentially putting the brakes on the French-Catholic school board's plans to demolish the building and construct a new $9.1-million high school in its place. The board, which purchased the hospital from the Sisters of Charity for $100,000, said earlier this month the building would eventually be levelled. Tuesday marked the deadline for submissions to a call for tenders for the demolition of the building.
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35. Renfrew Mercury: New home for stained glass business - Post office gets new tenant
Kathryn Bossy’s stained glass studio has found a new home on the second floor of Renfrew’s historic post office building. The building has been owned by the ratepayers of Renfrew since 2005, in the wake of a federal government move to dispose of surplus properties.
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36. Toronto Star: Dunlap Observatory Heritage observatory battle shifts to senior governments
More protection needed as Richmond Hill bylaw won't stop development.
Richmond Hill council recently passed a bylaw designating a large part of the David Dunlap Observatory lands as a cultural heritage site. While that may seem to be a victory for those who have tirelessly campaigned to protect the historic observatory and the green oasis that surrounds it since the University of Toronto sold it to a developer last year, there's growing consensus that the fight is far from over. But it's a battle the town says no longer involves the municipality.
Editor's Note: This seems a pretty clear cut case for involvement of senior levels of government. Aileen Carroll, the Minister of Culture has been very hesitant to act to date, will this be the first occasion where she uses her powers? |
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37. Toronto Star: Hume on Laneway development Toronto's 2,400 laneways offer great potential for development / They may be a solution for a City seeking a denser, more efficient future
A rose by any other name would smell as sweet, but what about a laneway? In Toronto, where they remain largely unnamed, alleys and lanes have never been fully integrated into the city. They hover forever just beyond the collective consciousness, not quite a part of things. We see them as dark, dirty and maybe even a little scary. In fact, Toronto has a huge number of lanes where people live and work. And except for the fact that city planning policies are designed to keep residents away, the back roads of Toronto could be home to thousands.
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38. Toronto Star: John A. Macdonald's birthplace endangered John A. Macdonald's home facing wrecker's bal
Glasgow building where Macdonald grew up to be demolished – and it's owned by Canadians
Yet from this doomed street in 1820, a failed businessman began a journey that ended in the creation of a country. He left his place of work in Brunswick Lane for the last time. A ship was waiting in the River Clyde, and he boarded with his family. Among them was his eldest surviving son, a 5-year-old. The boy was John A. Macdonald.
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39. Vaughan Today.ca March 5, Development around Martin Smith House Kleinburg condo fight heats up
A Kleinburg condo fight just got a whole lot messier. An external city solicitor has asked the Ontario Municipal Board to review its decision on a three-storey condo proposal surrounding the historic Martin Smith House and has requested the divisional court appeal the decision. A Feb. 18 OMB decision disagrees with the city’s argument that the provincial tribunal doesn’t have jurisdiction over development matters on the property surrounding the Martin Smith House due to its heritage status. The city is also seeking to adjourn an April 6 OMB meeting on the matter. The city’s attempt to eliminate the OMB from the process would grant city council jurisdiction over development on the lands, developer Frank Greco says.
Editor's Note: A bit of the back storey on the Martin Smith House |
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40. Waterloo Record: Heritage conservation districts are working, UW study says
Heritage conservation districts are good for property values, do not bury owners in red tape for renovations, preserve the character of old neighbourhoods and are populated with people happy to be there, says a University of Waterloo study. Robert Shipley, a professor of urban planning who specializes in heritage issues, oversaw the study of 27 conservation districts around the province in an effort to debunk what he calls persistent myths associated with the areas. "I think it’s really clear that as a planning mechanism conservation districts really work. They achieve their goals," Shipley said. In a conservation district, the streetscape and exteriors of buildings are protected under the Ontario Heritage Act. Any changes visible from the street must be approved by a municipality’s heritage committee. Nearly every time a city moves to establish a new heritage conservation district there is opposition from some property owners within the proposed boundaries. Opposition is almost always based on fears that property values will drop, and that the rules will not protect the area’s unique attributes anyway. Homeowners also worry they will be swamped with paper work when applying for permission for renovations.
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41. Windsor Star: $250K grant request for Assumption project deferred
Fundraisers heading a $10-million campaign to renovate historic Assumption Church hoped to convince the city’s heritage committee Wednesday to contribute $250,000 to the effort. But the committee deferred a decision after several board members expressed uneasiness over the impact such a large grant would have on its signature Community Heritage Fund. It has a $900,000 balance, with several other requests for funds outstanding. "We need to know the list of all the people coming to the table asking for the community funds before we make a decision," said board member Paul DeMarco. Board chairman Robin Easterbrook added that he wants to ensure applications to the Heritage Fund are treated consistently before any funding for Assumption is approved. City heritage planner John Calhoun was asked by the committee for a report on all outstanding requests to the fund and the potential impact of the Assumption decision. Any committee decision will require approval from city council. Assumption Church is the oldest parish in Canada west of Montreal. It has been recognized under the Ontario Heritage Act since 1975 and is also on the Canadian Register of Historic Places. The Assumption Heritage Trust, unveiled in September, will lead a campaign to raise $10 million for the crumbling church.
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42. Globe and Mail: Loss of China's Heritage Architectural gold rush washing away heritage
BEIJING — Special to The Globe and Mail Published on Tuesday, Oct. 06, 2009 12:00AM EDT Last updated on Thursday, Oct. 08, 2009 2:48AM EDT It was the party to which China was inviting the world, and it spared no effort in ensuring its facilities were up to the task. Last year's Olympics in Beijing left the city with some striking - some would say strikingly awful - buildings as mementos. The National Stadium, popularly known as the Bird's Nest, designed by Swiss architects Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron with assistance from famed Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, now sits largely empty, though it remains a pilgrimage site for Chinese tourists. The grounds of the graceful National Centre for the Performing Arts, also known as the Egg - or the Turtle's Egg to the derogatory - designed by French architect Paul Andreu, is now a popular place for a stroll on a warm evening. The design fever that gripped the city before the Olympics also brought unique architectural monuments such as the Rem Koolhaas-designed CCTV tower - nicknamed "The Pants" for its two asymmetrical towers linked at the top by a walkway - and boutique hotel the Opposite House, adjoining an embassy district in Sanlitun. The hotel's Japanese architect, Kengo Kuma, gave it a stunning exterior of multi-hued emerald glass and an interior that includes sweeping ceilings and gallery space.
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| SUPPORT : Issue No 149 October 15, 2009 | |||||||||||
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