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Yesterday the Globe and Mail, Canada’s paper of record, weighed in with an assessment of Atlantic Yards and the state of NYC’s big developments in general. Basically, our neighbor to the north doesn’t seem all that impressed with what it sees. The story’s got a zinger about B2, the first non-arena building on tap for AY (“a red-and-pink agglomeration reminiscent of a hillside shantytown”), and it notes the “stark” contrast between a $15-a-head Atlantic Yards fundraiser held at Southpaw last week and the unveiling of the luxury boxes for the Barclays Center (“you could pony up $540,000 a year for one of 12 ‘elite’ boxes, which, in an illustration that rich people operate in a different sphere of logic, are actually bunkers, located under the bleachers, with no view of the action”). The article ends by sticking it to the Bloomberg administration’s various grand and doomed plans:

Atlantic Yards isn’t the only large-scale development in trouble. At the end of March, the developer Tishman Speyer was granted the rights to build office space, parklands, and residential towers on Manhattan’s West Side Railyards. But two weeks ago, when it couldn’t change the terms of the billion-dollar deal it had just agreed to, it walked off like a spoiled child. The Bloomberg Administration now has two failures to its credit in that one spot, after its ill-fated plan for a football stadium died with its Olympic bid. Still, the administration, which doesn’t seem to grasp that New York is a city of people who live at street level, continues to push these sorts of high concept developments. Up in Harlem, city council has just approved a rezoning that will see skyscraping office buildings and luxury condos consume historic 125th Street. The local community was opposed to it, of course. Not that it mattered.

Not Mr. Gehry’s Neighbourhood? [Globe and Mail]
Railyards photo by masnyc; unhappy face by Cubtracker.


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  1. Fjorder, same here. I recently saw a couple of Canadian tourists by the water in DUMBO and, recognizing the name of the university on one of their jackets, made a comment to them. They turned around, smiled, introduced themselves, asked a bunch of questions about Brooklyn and spoke about how great their trip to New York had been. All of my experiences with them have been equally as positive.

  2. Dont get the logic at all

    1 & 2 story private homes = suburbs = no street life

    skyscrapers with residential + retail = urban = street life.

    I think what Canada doesnt understand is that to get street life you need lots of people ehhh

  3. The Globe & Mail is not representative of Canadians generally, but more accurately, caters to the sensibilities of navel-gazing Torontonians who have a severe case of NYC envy. Hence the schadenfreude when things go awry in the Big Apple.

    Consistent with the Canadian penchant for dogmatic adherence to sacred cows, there is an abiding belief north of the border than anything that contradicts the urban planning philosophy of Jane Jacobs must be opposed, denigrated and ridiculed post-haste, hence the snide comment regarding the Bloomberg administration’s alleged blindness to the reality of NYC living that the column’s author, in his infinite wisdom, so clearly perceives better than the rest of us.

    I think the article only highlights the author’s myopia. Unfortunate that Canada’s paper of record can’t come up with anything more nuanced and insightful.

  4. 10:35, you need to work on the accent. Yes, I’ve been to Canada many times and I think it’s a wonderful country, from Quebec City, Montreal, Banff/Jasper and Vancouver to the smaller, incredibly picturesque and charming towns. And Toronto and Torontonians are fabulous; they get out of the house plenty, as much during the winter months as the summer months.

  5. Biff, they are still really weird….have you ever been to Canada, eh? I’m soooory, if I was offensive, but I was in Tooroontoo last week, eh? Believe me, those guys don’t get oooout of the house enough…

  6. Biff, they are still really weird….have you ever been to Canada, eh? I’m soooory, if I was offensive, but I was in Tooroontoo last week, eh? Believe me, those guys don’t get oooout of the house enough…

  7. Biff, they are still really weird….have you ever been to Canada, eh? I’m soooory, if I was offensive, but I was in Tooroontoo last week, eh? Believe me, those guys don’t get out of the house enough…

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