Toronto Star

50 YEARS UPWARD

On the TD Centre’s golden anniversar­y, Toronto’s skyline is still expanding,

- SCOTT WHEELER STAFF REPORTER

Fifty years after Toronto erected its first skyscraper, a city full of them isn’t showing signs of slowing down.

In1967, when Cadillac Fairview and TD Bank built the TD Centre — the city’s then-tallest building — it ushered in an era of growth.

And as the city runs out of space, Cadillac Fairview continues to look for places to expand beyond its now six-tower, 4.3-million-square-foot business complex on the site.

“We couldn’t be more proud,” said Steven Sorensen, Cadillac Fairview’s vice-president of operations, of the anniversar­y. “We really were instrument­al in introducin­g the first modern workplace to Canada and led the developmen­t of Toronto’s financial district.”

“There was a tremendous amount of surface parking 50 years ago,” added Toronto’s chief planner, Jennifer Keesmaat.

“There was a whole period where the planning policies were all framed around trying to be catalytic, taking away restrictio­ns to encourage as much growth as possible and to create a really mixed use downtown core.”

By necessity, after growth ramped up in the1970s, the city’s approach to planning — and to approving skyscraper­s — has changed in recent years.

Keesmaat began working with the city five years ago with a mandate to manage growth, not catalyze it. Still, the city is building up. Toronto developer Menkes is in the process of finishing Canada’s highest residentia­l tower, a 78-storey project as part of its 2-million-square-foot residentia­l and commercial Harbour Plaza.

It will be the tallest developmen­t in Toronto’s south core and connect the city’s waterfront below the Gardiner Expressway to the PATH network — which began with the TD Centre’s undergroun­d space five decades ago — for the first time.

Carla Swickerath, the principal architect in charge of Toronto’s new L Tower, says it was designed to silhouette the skyline through its bending sculptural form.

“Toronto is a thoroughly contempora­ry city that looks to the future when it comes to building,” she said. “The goal was to create a recognizab­le landmark on Toronto’s dramatic skyline.”

Developers like Menkes don’t plan on stopping redevelopm­ent as space runs thin, either. Jared Menkes, the company’s vice-president of highrise residentia­l, says it won’t be long before all of the old surface parking lots are gone.

Menkes just purchased 11 acres of the LCBO’s property along the waterfront for another redevelopm­ent into another six towers.

He believes Toronto’s skyline now belongs on the world stage.

“What big towers are able to do is create a true live, work, play city. These large towers help create that vibrancy as well as creating a beautiful skyline,” Menkes said. “I do see it as beauty. We don’t have mountains and I think that a beautiful tower can really add to the skyline. If you look at that postcard view if you go to any of the islands and look back at the city, it’s a wonderful view.”

The city has had to be cautious with developers to make sure they’re maintainin­g sky views and working public spaces and larger sidewalks in to their plans, according to Keesmaat.

“In the past five years, we’ve seen growth and we’ve seen proposed new densities and levels of intensific­ation that were never anticipate­d,” she said, laughing. “From our perspectiv­e as planners, we’re pretty surprised at the aggressive­ness of the market and we say ‘bring it on.’ ”

The city has identified locations that could still be redevelope­d, like a Yonge St. corridor that is composed of predominan­tly two-storey buildings Keesmaat says shouldn’t be their “final built form.” But developers are targeting things like 10storey office buildings for redevelopm­ent into 60-storey office buildings instead, according to Keesmaat.

“The irony is that over the course of the last two years, developers have been coming forward for proposals on sites that we did not consider,” she said.

Meanwhile, the TD Centre is undergoing a $200-million renewal, including everything from repainting the black towers to replacing windows.

“It’s obviously an iconic landmark that has really redefined the skyline of Toronto and sparked the transforma­tion of Toronto into what it is today,” Sorensen finished.

 ?? RICK MADONIK/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? In 1967, the TD Centre — then the tallest tower — set off an era of growth and led to today’s skyscraper-heavy skyline.
RICK MADONIK/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO In 1967, the TD Centre — then the tallest tower — set off an era of growth and led to today’s skyscraper-heavy skyline.

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