Unbuilt Toronto: A History of the City That Might Have Been

Unbuilt Toronto: A History of the City That Might Have Been

by Mark Osbaldeston
Unbuilt Toronto: A History of the City That Might Have Been

Unbuilt Toronto: A History of the City That Might Have Been

by Mark Osbaldeston

Paperback

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Overview

Short-listed for the 2009 Toronto Book Awards and Heritage Toronto Book Awards and the 2012 Speaker’s Award

Unbuilt Toronto explores never-realized building projects in and around Toronto, from the citys founding to the twenty-first century. Delving into unfulfilled and largely forgotten visions for grand public buildings, landmark skyscrapers, highways, subways, and arts and recreation venues, it outlines such ambitious schemes as St. Alban’s Cathedral, the Queen subway line and early city plans that would have resulted in a Paris-by-the-Lake.

Readers may lament the loss of some projects (such as the Eatons College Street tower), be thankful for the disappearance of others (a highway through the Annex), and marvel at the downtown that could have been (with underground roads and walkways in the sky).

Featuring 147 photographs and illustrations, many never before published, Unbuilt Toronto casts a different light on a city you thought you knew.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781550028355
Publisher: Dundurn Press
Publication date: 10/27/2008
Series: The City That Might Have Been , #1
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 8.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Mark Osbaldeston has written about architecture and city planning for the National Post and Eye Weekly, and has reviewed architecture books for Quill & Quire and Azure. A lawyer, he has practised in both the private and public sectors. He lives in Toronto.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

An impressively researched exploration of dozens of never-realized architectural and master-planning projects intended for the city Ideally, this book will give necessary perspective to the bureaucrats, planners, and architects who contribute to the evolving form of the city. One hopes that Unbuilt Toronto will inspire a sustained collective vision that will ameliorate a Toronto that at times seems more than an amateurish aggregation of merely good-enough interventions.

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