Jack Harris
New Member
any other projects going forward around this area in the near future ?
Your comments sound so revisionist to me. This building on 106 street is the absolute maximum height allowed under the restrictions of the old overlay. In fact the elevator does not go to the top floor otherwise it would have violated those restrictions. Notice also the low ceiling of the ground floor where normally an office would have vaulted ceilings. There other examples of the height restrictions in that area dictating unusual building design.Did the airport overlay have that much of an impact on commercial high rise development? I say this as, 25 years ago, I don't think there were even ten, 40 storey residential towers in all of Canada and only a small fraction of all the 30 storey towers completed today. Height records for residential have been broken over and over all over the nation since the turn of the century. It's impact on skylines is that they aren't held up as economic prowess anymore but, as diminishing home ownership affordability,
These three shots show me the long-lasting the effect of the municipal airport overlay in restricting building height. Slowly, that effect is disappearing.
Yes, kind of, sort of, but without much of the impressive older architecture there. So many of the buildings in the area were built in the 1970's and 80's when a much plainer style was the fashion.Honestly, even if it was artificially imposed I don't mind the uniform height of the buildings in Government Centre. Kinda gives me a Washington DC vibe.