Tag Archives: residential
20160116. An aerial view of Regent Park’s white aluminum-cladded One Park Place Condos.
20151227. The modernist Bellamy Towers of Scarborough Village.
20151226. The windows of people’s lives….in a modernist high-rise.
20151220. One of Uno Prii’s most expressive Toronto buildings.
20151218. The Exhibit Residences’ askew cubes rise opposite the ROM.
20151119. A playful modernist porte-cochère at the Four Thousand apartments in Toronto.
20150925. The Library District Condos at Toronto’s CityPlace. KPMB Architects.
20150911. Stars and condos.
20150826. Toronto’s un-designated 1974 Brutalist Masters Building A.
20150823. A bird’s eye view of Toronto’s Art Deco inspired West Harbour City towers. Quadrangle Architects, 2011.
20150822. Taking the Clear Spirit Tower head on in Toronto’s Distillery District.
20150814. An aerial view of Toronto’s newest Distillery District Condos (Gooderham and Clear Spirit).
20150312. The impressive black-clad River City Phase I in Toronto’s West Don lands.
20141107. The tall, narrow and not-so-blue CrystalBlu condos (21 Balmuto) offer a clear view down Toronto’s Hayden Street.
20141021. Rochester’s impressive and unusual Andrews Terrace apartment building (Architects Bertin & O’Connell, c.1975).
20141013. Looking NW across Toronto. Beyond the modern residential towers lies the CIBC tower at Yonge and Bloor.
20140822. Modernist high-rise demolition cross-section in Regent Park, Toronto.
We should applaud the revitilization in Regent Park but should also appreciate the design of these modernist towers before all five are gone.
They were very unique. John Bentley Mays did a good job describing these apartments: “Every one of the five high-rises is a stack of 97 one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments, each disposed, like a small townhouse, on two floors. By eliminating corridors on every second floor — the elevator skips the floors without hallways — Dickinson was able to open out the common area in each apartment to the width of the whole slab. The results: a sense of spaciousness, light coming from two directions, good cross-ventilation and views of Lake Ontario for almost every resident of the towers.”