Quote:
Originally Posted by mleblanc
I'll wait for a proposal to make final judgement, but I'd be sad to see one of the last varied blocks downtown get turned into one monolithic development. I've always loved Bedford Row - feels like a quaint little oasis amongst all the chaos, and there's several charming brick buildings in this demolition.
Sappiness aside, hopefully we see a nice proposal for this. Great spot for some density - more people living downtown will always be a good thing.
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I agree, except for the sappiness comment. I don't think it's sappy to hope for some retention of granular heritage properties, vs yet another monolith. IMHO it actually shows good judgement and hope that the downtown can still hold on to some of its character.
In many ways, you'd never know that Halifax is as old of a city as it is. Looking downtown it appears that it was perhaps just a small town until the 1960s, and that then it suddenly grew into a city. It is what it is, however. I've been musing if it would really matter if all heritage properties were replaced with 2020s-style architecture. There would still be functional buildings where many people could live and lots of street level retail. Does it really matter whether future generations can have some idea of what it used to be like here? Not sure if people still think it's relevant, and for those who do there are lots of archives photos to look at. For those of us who remember it, we'll all be gone someday, so if nobody else cares, what does it matter?