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I'm torn. Obviously my preference by a significant margin is to have the buildings remain intact. But at the expense of the whole project? Then I'm not so sure. What the Tannery has added to downtown in terms of employment can not be understated.
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The worst failure to preserve a property is, in my mind, the old Forsyth factory on Duke near Young. If the City had only dedicated a bit more maintenance, we'd have a true heritage gem in the heart of downtown.
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The Forsythe plant was a big loss, as was the Lyric Theatre, but the granddaddy of Kitchener's losses remains the old City Hall. The new City Hall is a vastly better facility, but the old building and civic square was truly the heart of the city for many people.
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(10-25-2014, 05:25 PM)rangersfan Wrote: I can't seem to find a real image of the project once proposed for 247 King st N by Tanem Developments but I was always a big fan of this project. I feel like this development would have offered something vastly superior to what sits there today.
Project discussed at this page:
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/showthre...850&page=1
News articles about the project:
http://www.thecord.ca/building-plans-at-...niversity/
Has the Shoeless Joe's building prevented this from happening? This project predates my arrival to the region. What derailed it?
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I used to be the mayor of sim city. I know what I am talking about.
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My understanding was that the plaza had some tenants who were not interested in the business interruption and had some time left on their lease (ahm, Starbucks).
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Ya that's my understanding too.
I think the new building (shoeless joes kind of ruins most development opportunities in terms of large scale.
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A lost opportunity for me would have been to move the old Ontario Table and Chair factory (now the site of 144 Park) to Doon Heritage Village and possibly incorporating it into the new Waterloo Region Museum as a gateway to the Village. It was from the same time period that the Village depicts (ie 1914) was of the right scale to not dominate anything already there or be too difficult to move, even if it were brick-by-brick. With the right co-operation with places like Conestoga College or other local Masons, it would have been a perfect marriage of old and new.