“really, the skyline is three lines. it’s the water’s edge, it’s the line of when you connect the dots of the buildings, and then it’s the mountain ridges. … there’s a balance between the three lines, and you’ve got to be careful,” gordon said. “it’s a zen thing.”
illustrations showing a development proposed for downtown vancouver, from holborn group and designed by henriquez partners architects
norm li
gordon has heard, over the years, from people who say: “there’s no view crisis, there’s no heritage crisis, there’s no shadow crisis, there’s a housing crisis.”
the argument is that those other considerations should not prevent tall buildings that contribute significantly to the supply of homes, or hotel rooms, or other priorities.
gordon is not so sure.
“as joni mitchell sang: ‘you don’t know what you’ve got ’till it’s gone,'” gordon said. “i’m not on board with just saying: ‘it’s a housing crisis, let’s just let ‘er rip.'”
vancouver architect james cheng has had a hand in shaping the city’s skyline, designing some of its tallest buildings including the shangri-la (200 metres) and the stack office building (162 metres).
cheng said he is not interested in superficial “beauty pageant” discussions about which big buildings are attractive or not, or how tall they should be. he does, however, spend a lot of time thinking about what he calls “the role of highrises in vancouver in historic, social, cultural, economic, and artistic terms, as a barometer of our city’s health.”