Yes. To a certain extent I like how they treat Yonge st. south of Bloor. They have kept a lot of the old building stock and the towers are are bumped to the adjacent lot on the side streets. It's a sensible way to preserve your high streets/shopping drags while increasing density.
Random thought but I just wondered if the price of steel within Canada has dropped with what I can only imagine less exports to the US.
Either way.. your point stands. That 6 ish floor building on Cyrville went the same route about 2 years ago which was surprising. The footprint was also...
I think it's different enough that it won't give mis matched paint on a fender vibes but I feel what your saying. The quality of the precast looks excellent, oopsies aside.
I think everyone here wishes your enthusiasm would infect the city. Next time you take an elevator touch all the hand rails and get extra pushy with the buttons.
Dang.. they didn't let you out until 2:53?
It's good to see a bunch of these newer buildings getting fully blueskinned. Is this a new change to the building code? Cuz it's a pretty good layer of protection despite the added cost.
The Reddit comments on this the other day were hilarious. Like.. bro if your calling this junk have you looked around? Sure the tower portions are a bit plain bit the ground level podium areas seem quite nice to me.
Holy prominence Batman!
Side note... holy smokes I am eager to see some cladding on the Gladstone/Somerset village build there. I forget exactly what its called. I am imagining the cladding will be somewhat similar to the already completed building at Zibi that has the bright white.