Here is the video of the too-tall version of Waterfront Tower, which confirms that, like the MNP Tower, it will be lost in the skyline from most downtown vantage points.
Imagine a tower of this quality and in this location
twice as tall. We could have looked upon it with awe, not because it was tall but because it had the proper--and thus most faithful and beautiful--dimensions for the idea suggested in this design, this location, and this city. We would have witnessed the majesty of the natural and the man-made co-existing symbiotically, neither one being subordinated to the other, but both ascending together in harmony. It would have been truly iconic and a Vancouver landmark for a century to come.
I speak from a purely aesthetic standpoint, of course. I realize that developers can only build what is economically justifiable, although I suspect that if city hall threw off the yoke and embraced a culture of economic freedom, such towers would most definitely come along. Indeed, from the minutes of the Gastown Historic Area Planning Committee, we already know that the developers wanted to go even taller than this version, in spite of Vancouver's current economic culture.
Unfortunately, despite all its potential beauty and quality, the video demonstrates that this tower--which could have altered the very landscape of Vancouver forever--will not really change the city that much at all.