PDA

View Full Version : Favorite Building In London


sparky212
May 16, 2009, 7:43 PM
1.One London Place

2.City Center 1,2

3.The Renaissance

4.The Harriston

5.The Dominion Public Building

6.City Place

7.The Courthouse

8.Talbot Center 1,2

9.Grace Donnelly Women's Health Pavilion

10.The New Police Station

QuantumLeap
May 16, 2009, 8:08 PM
Is this is a list of options from which we are to choose, or is this your top 10?

If the latter, I really hope by "courthouse" you mean the old courthouse, not the new one. The new(er) one is perhaps the ugliest building in London, and certainly its most visible abomination.

Also, what do you mean by favourite? Best-looking? Inside and outside or only inside?

Here's my top buildings (in no particular order) best-looking from the outside
St. Paul's old Rectory (Richmond and Dufferin)
Dominion Public Bldg
London Life
201 Queens (Clarence and Queens) - this one is contentious, I know
Middlesex College
Labatt Arts Pavilion
Wellington Street Red-brick Apartments
Delta Armouries (New and old parts together)
"Italianate Row" - buildings on East side of Richmond between King and York
new Manufacturing Centre at Fanshawe
Talbot Centre (except I HATE the mall inside - I really wish they had made the businesses face onto Fullarton)
Old Courthouse
St. Peter's Cathedral
110? Cherryhill (the tall one) - also contentious, I know


Some of the Ugliest Buildings in London:
Social Science Centre @ UWO
New Courthouse
Drewlo Apartments on Dundas
White Oaks Mall
University Hospital
Centennial House Apartments

sparky212
May 16, 2009, 8:10 PM
to choose from and its the new couthouse

MolsonExport
May 20, 2009, 4:06 PM
my fave:
http://www.doorsopenontario.on.ca/userfiles/page_attachments/Library/1/2855820_Dominion-Public-Building-1.jpg
^doorsopenontario.on.ca

MolsonExport
May 20, 2009, 4:06 PM
My other fave:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/d/d6/London-OntarioChurch1.jpg/200px-London-OntarioChurch1.jpg
^wikipedia

MolsonExport
May 20, 2009, 4:09 PM
one of the world's ugliest buildings?
http://www.lawyers.ca/international/images/Londoncourt.jpg

shamefully looks down over the Thames, Harris park, etc.

flar
May 20, 2009, 4:15 PM
Without a doubt, the Dominion Public Building.

sparky212
May 20, 2009, 7:58 PM
I personnaly like the police station its not perfect but i really like the copper plates they are using

SlickFranky
May 20, 2009, 11:13 PM
Without a doubt, the Dominion Public Building.

Yeah, that place rocks pretty hard.

ldoto
May 21, 2009, 2:27 AM
(1) One London Place

(2) Old Courthouse

(3) Dominion Public Bldg

(4) Delta Armouries

(5) Talbot Center 1,2

Originally Posted bysparky212
I personnaly like the police station its not perfect but i really like the copper plates they are using

Do you have new pics from the police station!!!!!:shrug:

ldoto
May 21, 2009, 3:11 AM
:previous:

Update!!!

Pics and links of New Police Station

London Police Service Headquarters Expansion and Renovation!!!!

Take a look at these pics and links!!!


http://police.city.london.on.ca/Newsroom/PDFs/LPSFacilityConstructionProgress.pdf

http://www.csparch.com/#section=3&category=10&page=54

http://www.bondfield.com/correctional/londonpolicehq.html[/B]

manny_santos
Jun 2, 2009, 2:48 AM
For me...

1. One London Place
2. Middlesex College
3. City Centre
4. St. Peter's Basilica
5. Delta London Armouries
6. St. Peter's Seminary
7. Dominion Public Building
8. University College
9. Brescia College residence
10. Dante Lenardon Hall (formerly the Silverwood Mansion)

And among the worst...

D.B. Weldon Library
Social Science Centre
City Hall
Saunders Secondary School
Bell Building

I'm indifferent to White Oaks Mall. The 1988 addition is nice at least.

MolsonExport
Jun 2, 2009, 1:04 PM
^courthouse? as on the worst list?

SlickFranky
Jun 3, 2009, 4:24 AM
I love our crazy brutalist courthouse. Well...maybe love is the wrong word...but I respect it. It looks so ominous and foreboding...powerful...like the strong arm of justice!

And if London ever dumps our mayor and opts for an evil overlord, his office (or throne room) would fit in perfectly in the top floor of that building. With a few decorative touches, some dark clouds, and some circling vultures...that place would make a wicked evil headquarters.
:worship: :worship: :hell: :worship: :worship:

MolsonExport
Jun 3, 2009, 1:13 PM
^ a perfect setting for Friday nite lights. Move the patio to that decrepit concrete mezzanine hallway. If ol Timmy Best decides to get loaded, he can go to court (do not pass go, do not collect $200)

ForestryW
Jun 5, 2009, 12:17 AM
The old post office is definitely a winner. There's also an unnamed building on Wellington across from Vic Park near Centennial Hall that I've always liked.

sparky212
Jun 5, 2009, 12:21 AM
City Hall????
I like the old cibc across from vic park

haljackey
Apr 15, 2010, 7:25 PM
my fave:
http://www.doorsopenontario.on.ca/userfiles/page_attachments/Library/1/2855820_Dominion-Public-Building-1.jpg
^doorsopenontario.on.ca

I like that one too. Best art deco building

One London Place- best modern building

Old Courthouse- best historic building

MikeOnt
Apr 25, 2010, 7:44 PM
One London Place and the Delta Armouries.
Beal is a cool building, old and huge. JLC is nice also.

haljackey
Oct 2, 2010, 7:20 PM
My vote for the ugliest building:
http://img842.imageshack.us/img842/1098/clipboard01bb.jpg

Anyone heard of a paintbrush? :koko:

Simpseatles
Nov 16, 2010, 1:04 AM
I thought I might add my 2 cents to this thread:

One London Place has to be my favourite building in the Forest City for sure! :worship: It's an impressive symbol for London, and has such a beautiful design. Every angle I see it, it appears different with it's triangular shape. It even manages to seem very tall every time I'm around it. Definately it's the nicest building in SW Ontario, and perhaps all of Ontario outside the GTA (Hamilton, Windsor, and KW got nothing on it). Thank god we have it to take away from all the less than desirable looking buildings in our Downtown.

Anyways, some of my other favourites would have to be the Dominion Public Building since it's our oldest "skyscraper", and the former courthouse. Also the new market is quite nice with its public square. The TD towers are alright and they scream big city to me (they look really imposing when you drive down Hamilton). The Royal Bank Tower, the Talbot Centre and the massive London Life building bring their own charm to the city as well.

haljackey
Nov 16, 2010, 2:26 AM
Anyways, some of my other favourites would have to be the Dominion Public Building

Art Deco FTW! They work very well mixed with modern designs like One London Place and Talbot Centre. The contrast is worth noting. Whenever you walk down Dundas and Clarance and see the old TD building there, you'll see OLP behind it. Looks excellent.

I'm not a big fan of brutalist buildings which is why I loathe the "new" courthouse. Probably the best of the worst of this design.

MolsonExport
Nov 16, 2010, 5:33 PM
My vote for the ugliest building:
http://img842.imageshack.us/img842/1098/clipboard01bb.jpg

Anyone heard of a paintbrush? :koko:

Looks like the belle of the ball next to the Courthouse monstrosity.


Hell, they are both fugly. London has this amazing fetish with concrete brutalism.

Simpseatles
Nov 17, 2010, 1:31 AM
^ Good thing the people that stay in the Hilton don't have to look at the building they're in!:haha:

I don't actually mind the courthouse. Maybe it's because when I was younger I was awestruck by any large building downtown and I didn't really start feeling the hate untill I went on this website.

Buildings I can't stand include any of those commie-block apartments around Cherryhill, Proudfoot, and Oxford/Wonderland. That place gives me the creeps!:(

Also there's a couple ugly apartment buildings on Dundas between William and Adelaide, and a really sad looking one at the plaza between City Hall, and Centennial Hall. Sorry for not having the specific names.

MolsonExport
Nov 17, 2010, 6:10 PM
The brutalism is mushrooming at unWonderland and Oxfart.

bolognium
Nov 24, 2010, 8:27 AM
It'd be a complete lie if I said anything but One London Place as my first pick. London's skyline would be completely different Without OLP. The glass of OLP and the Talbot Centre towers is definitely the main saving grace of London's skyline.

It's difficult to pick my favourite but to name a couple: Dominion Public, London Life, Wright Lithography, Queens walk-ups by the old library and most of downtown Dundas.

Dang, now I want to walk downtown.

haljackey
Nov 24, 2010, 4:58 PM
Dang, now I want to walk downtown.



Watch out for the hobos and coke addicts while you're there! They're lurking on every corner these days, asking for money or just making you feel uncomfortable. :(

I was in downtown Toronto not long ago and it was really sad to see how few of them there were compared to London. Not sure if Toronto Police are moving them elsewhere or something but the contrast between the two cities was considerable.

Blitz
Nov 24, 2010, 5:08 PM
I have an unpleasant view of the Hilton from my apartment in City Place. I can't believe a 'luxury' hotel just lets it go like that, the building needs a serious power wash. The Weldon Library at UWO is also in need of one (last I checked anyway).

haljackey
Nov 24, 2010, 6:20 PM
I have an unpleasant view of the Hilton from my apartment in City Place. I can't believe a 'luxury' hotel just lets it go like that, the building needs a serious power wash. The Weldon Library at UWO is also in need of one (last I checked anyway).

Eww... CityPlace has a pretty decent view on the other side. I took these shots from a balcony on the west tower.

http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4109/5032195852_4a722e445a_b.jpg

http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4086/5025753461_6ca3c71f77_b.jpg

http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4103/5032195138_8160a24844_b.jpg

That church has some pretty cool nightlighting too. It gets my vote for my favorite church in London.
http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4113/5026367478_a7b249279d_b.jpg

Most of the concrete "commie" blocks in London could use a paintjob. The Hilton and Weldon are the best examples, but City Centre and the Social Science Centre are also excellent candidates.

bolognium
Nov 24, 2010, 6:33 PM
Watch out for the hobos and coke addicts while you're there! They're lurking on every corner these days, asking for money or just making you feel uncomfortable. :(

I don't really mind the bums. In fact, one of them actually gave me a good laugh the other day.

I was locking up my bike by the library entrance on Dundas when a guy approached me and asked if I could give him some change for weed. When I said no he says to me "Well then how about some weed for a change?" :tup:

And great views from City Place. I'd always imagined the views from the west tower would be pretty spectacular.

Blitz
Nov 24, 2010, 8:06 PM
Yeah, I live in the east tower but I'm on the top floor so it's a decent view. I'll work on posting some pics soon.

Simpseatles
Nov 24, 2010, 11:40 PM
Watch out for the hobos and coke addicts while you're there! They're lurking on every corner these days, asking for money or just making you feel uncomfortable. :(

I was in downtown Toronto not long ago and it was really sad to see how few of them there were compared to London. Not sure if Toronto Police are moving them elsewhere or something but the contrast between the two cities was considerable.

I'll be the first to admit that I don't walk downtown all that much, because of where I live, and where I do most of my activities and stuff (although I do go to school downtown, where I get fantastic views of the people hanging around the meth clinic in most of my classes!):(

However when I have ventured into London's scary downtown I haven't found it all that bad. In fact my view on Toronto would have to be the opposite. In the short walk I took arund downtown TO a couple of weeks ago I must have seen close to 20 homeless people. That surprised me because I hadn't been there in about 4 years, but I was in NYC recently where I encountered maybe 2 or 3 in my entire 5 day trip!

Here I've been force fed this idea that Toronto is the heavenly, clean, urban metropolis that the entire world should be jealous of. But with all these rich people moving into fancy condos, they still have a serious homelessness problem to adress it seems.

At least in London there aren't any super high expectations to be lived up to. We may have a homelessness problem, but because we are a smaller city, and aren't as obsessed with becoming "world class", maybe we could actually help these people instead of sweeping them aside for deluxe condos!:)

Wharn
Jan 8, 2011, 10:38 PM
Here I've been force fed this idea that Toronto is the heavenly, clean, urban metropolis that the entire world should be jealous of. But with all these rich people moving into fancy condos, they still have a serious homelessness problem to adress it seems.


Having lived there for a good part of my life I can confidently say that it's anything but heavenly. The place has been getting progressively worse over the past decade or two due to some very poor planning decisions (amalgamation, abandoning all plans for the Scarberia Expressway, anti-subway sentiment and light rail folly, greenbelt ALL THE WAY AROUND THE CITY, etc). Poor transport planning and constraints on development lead to expensive housing (can't build out anymore and everyone will pay top dollar to live in the core, close to work) that may work to push people onto the street when rents become unaffordable.

You notice a very big difference between London and Toronto in this regard; housing and rents in London are way more affordable (especially if you live further away from the University). Despite the fact that this city gets some much-deserved hate from its residents, I personally prefer it :D

Simpseatles
Apr 22, 2011, 10:15 PM
Does anyone know the name of the taller, 20's era building at the northeast corner of Dundas and Clarance? I quite like it!:D

manny_santos
Apr 23, 2011, 12:42 AM
Does anyone know the name of the taller, 20's era building at the northeast corner of Dundas and Clarance? I quite like it!:D

Historically that was the Huron & Erie Trust Company building, the original headquarters of what became Canada Trust.

Simpseatles
Apr 23, 2011, 7:18 PM
Historically that was the Huron & Erie Trust Company building, the original headquarters of what became Canada Trust.

Thanks! The reason I was struck by it, is that it must have been the second tallest (to the Dominion Public Building) in the city prior to the 50's. Also, it's a building of moderate height (8 stories?), that's actually anchored on Dundas Street, where mostly 19th century storefronts dominate.

I found a picture of it.

http://z.about.com/f/wiki/e/en/thumb/f/f7/London-OntarioBank.jpg/200px-London-OntarioBank.jpg
http://www.associatepublisher.com/e/l/lo/london,_ontario.htm

Kokkei Mizu
Apr 24, 2011, 4:11 AM
I found a picture of it.

You can also use Google Maps' Street View service to look at buildings... Very useful. 99.9% of the streets and roads in London and St. Thomas have Street View. :)

Simpseatles
Apr 24, 2011, 2:38 PM
You can also use Google Maps' Street View service to look at buildings... Very useful. 99.9% of the streets and roads in London and St. Thomas have Street View. :)

True, I just don't know how to post streetview pictures.

manny_santos
Apr 24, 2011, 4:39 PM
True, I just don't know how to post streetview pictures.

Your best bet is to take a screenshot using the Print Screen key on a PC, and then uploading the image to Photobucket or a similar site. I'm not sure how to take a screenshot on a Mac.

Kokkei Mizu
Apr 25, 2011, 3:20 AM
Or you share a link of the Street View (by clicking "Link" in the top right-hand corner of the Street View or map). The link will retain the exact position in Street View, so we can see the building you're referring to, and then look around the area, etc. :)

Simpseatles
Apr 29, 2011, 7:22 PM
I'd say that this building rivals One London Place, as an instantly recognizable symbol of the city.

http://www.cvltvre.com/mod/cvltvre_events/thumbnail.php?id=53648
http://www.cvltvre.com/pg/cvltvre_events/view/53649

Simpseatles
Feb 5, 2012, 6:08 PM
^Well, that probably won't be true any more after the unfortunate logo change.:rolleyes:

Anyways, I stumbled upon an interesting post on Urban Toronto today.

http://urbantoronto.ca/forum/showthread.php/1887-London-(Ontario)-Snaps-Part-II

Yes, it's a little condescending, but the photographer raises an interesting point about City hall. They seemed to be really quite impressed with it, and they pointed out some things that I never really noticed before. What I was wondering is if we should be putting more care into preserving this modernist artifact. Is city hall (and plaza) a masterpiece, or another forgettable relic of an era of poor planning? I say this because I can't really think of any other real examples of modernism in the city. Yes, there's a couple ugly low rises downtown, but other than that I'm stuck. I understand that city hall may end up geting used as a downtown UWO campus if we ever get a new one, and I think it would be nice if they would restore the plaza to some of it's former glory. Also, a reclad of the apartment building would do wonders. City Hall is far from my favourite building in the city, but if it's really our only quality example of modernism, should we be doing more to preserve it? I mean, Nathan Phillips Square is getting a makeover in Toronto, and everyone seems to love their City Hall despite it's shortcomings, what about ours?

MolsonExport
Feb 6, 2012, 2:49 AM
I'd say that this building rivals One London Place, as an instantly recognizable symbol of the city.

http://www.cvltvre.com/mod/cvltvre_events/thumbnail.php?id=53648
http://www.cvltvre.com/pg/cvltvre_events/view/53649

hear, hear!!

manny_santos
Feb 6, 2012, 4:46 AM
Yes, it's a little condescending, but the photographer raises an interesting point about City hall. They seemed to be really quite impressed with it, and they pointed out some things that I never really noticed before. What I was wondering is if we should be putting more care into preserving this modernist artifact. Is city hall (and plaza) a masterpiece, or another forgettable relic of an era of poor planning?

Having read through some Free Press archives from 1971, I can say that City Hall was heavily criticized architecturally when it first opened. The front overhang was compared to a giant television set in one editorial.