nickwarzin.com Reinventing the wheel, day after day.

2Mar/100

From the Archives

Here is where I spend too much of my time: City of Toronto: Search the Archives. You should spend too much of your time there, too.

Here's a depressing before-and-after to top off your Monday evening:

The Gooderham/Flatiron Building in its proper context, with a dense wedge of city behind it and an array of Confederation-era buildings on both sides of Front/Wellington. See under the cut for some "after" shots from the 1960s.

28Feb/100

The role of Yonge & Dundas Square

Listen.

I'm not pointing this out to confirm a widespread belief that I can find something to be negative about regardless of the circumstances. Amidst all the hooping and hollering of this evening's revelry downtown, however, I noticed an interesting phenomenon and felt I should at least bumble through a word or two about it.

Dundas Square, empty, in the midst of the celebration of the decade

This is Yonge-Dundas Square, a plaza opened in downtown Toronto back in late 2002. It is a public-private partnership, and exists largely due to the efforts of outgoing city councillor Kyle Rae. The square was intended to be the city's new central meeting place; its Times Square; its Piccadilly Circus. Yes, I'm ripping this word-for-word from the Wikipedia page. I'm le tired.

This photo was also taken during what will probably be remembered as the largest impromptu gathering of people on Yonge Street in decades: the celebration of Canada's gold medal in Men's Hockey, and a more general celebration of our Olympic successes.

Notice anything strange about the crowd? About where they chose to celebrate? The Square is dark, barren, unused and ignored, while tens of thousands of people dance and sing in the middle of the street.

There are good reasons for this, and you'll find many of them made clear either directly or incidentally in this book.

I'm not sure if Jane Jacobs ever commented publicly on Y-D Square and the "revitalization" of Yonge Street, but I have a feeling she could have predicted the phenomenon I photographed above. A city's streets are its veins, and its life, and the confluence of a city's most important and most travelled routes becomes the very heart of a city: more so than its financial district, and more so than its shopping strips. This is not, however, an effect that can be manufactured (and as I say this, thousands of SimCity players around the globe grimly nod in unison), and Y-D Square was a distinct attempt to manufacture the heart of our city.

The Square always seemed to me like a really crass attempt at selling a bit of ad space: an exploitation of Yonge Street's role as the heart of our city. Some of the events organized there over the past eight years bear this out, while others seem like genuinely interesting and positive uses of the space (though, probably not surprisingly, much of the latter has been organized not by city staff but by the populace itself: see Newmindspace, et al). This is probably consistent with the idea of a public/private partnership, and I suppose as long as the private sector plays a role in defining our public spaces there will always be events whose primary purpose is to provide a large number of eyeballs in one place.

Any and all cynicism aside, I still find it interesting that when a party of this magnitude occurs -- the celebration of the century so far, easily besting the impromptu party after the Leafs' second-round playoff victory in 2002 -- the square that was built specifically to contain it is left empty. Somewhere out there, a Toronto city planner is still misunderstanding how cities work. And if Jane Jacobs could witness this, I feel she wouldn't be surprised at all.

18Feb/100

Sitting on top of the world

RBCOn my lunch break today, I took a quick trip to the corner of Wellington and Simcoe to explore the new RBC Dexia building (pictured right). My, er, feelings toward the building aside, I had heard the top floors were still unoccupied and easy to explore and I had been looking forward to visiting it for weeks. So, today, I had an excellent view whilst I sat cross-legged and ate my sandwich:

not my office

This is the corner of Front and University

city

There's more under the cut, if'n y'like...

7Jan/105

Atrium Invasion 2010

So, on Monday Alicia and I threw a toy paratrooper off the 14th floor of the Atrium on Bay and filmed it. Here are the results:

2Jan/104

I <3 transit & infrastructure & photos

Hello!

I've wanted to have one of my better Diana shots blown up for some time now, but huge. And I didn't want a digital enlargement either -- I could do that -- I wanted light to pass through my negative at varying degrees of intensity and fall on light-sensitive paper, to put it most literally. And I wanted the Tri-X grain to be the size of breakfast cereal. This kind of thing is much harder to find these days than you'd expect, though a chat with my photog uncle has led me to Silvano Imaging, a place that takes great pride in its old-school photo lab. Let's see if they'll follow me down the treacherous rabbit-hole of insanely blurry and chunky photo enlargements without insisting that I'm crazy and don't know what I'm asking for and that the results won't please me and would-I-please-pay-in-advance-kthxbye.

I'm having troubles deciding between the following two photos, though. I can already guess which would look better on a living room wall, but my favourite is the other one, the more striking one. Any input would be great.

a 509 and a sky of city

a 509

My Dundas St East photo is probably in the running, too, but I was leaning towards one of the monochrome shots. Thoughts?

7Oct/090

Street View Photo Match-Up Marathon!!!111`

I just couldn't help it... this is too much fun. Click on any of the images for high-res versions on Flickr.

7Oct/090

Golden Horseshoe tour

Interesting (to me) sights around the GTA, with Wikipedia and Flickr cross-references whenever possible:

(okay... I'm having more fun photo-matching than I expected to, so I figure I'll do that in another thread. I'll keep adding "funny" or "interesting" finds to this entry.)

25Aug/090

Another imported GPS route

I'm not getting sick of this yet, and the quicker I am with the whole process the less time I have to spend fiddling with it while I'm in NY.

25Aug/090

Just another geo test

A GPS track of my morning commute. I love the drunken, swaggering, imperfect line along Queen, and the confused jump when I took the subway from Queen to Dundas. This makes me want to try the GPS equivalent of skywriting, so remind me later not to propose to anyone using this method.

/nerd

24Aug/090

Testing a geo mashup plugin

Just testing! I'll go through my process in a post later.

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