Английская Википедия:Burano (building)

Материал из Онлайн справочника
Перейти к навигацииПерейти к поиску

Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox building

Файл:North facade of the Burano, 2017 05 12 -a (33776584084).jpg
Burano building has a three storey retail space, with a large mural on the original structure's wall

Burano is a 50 storey, 163 metre tall residential high-rise condominium complex on Bay Street between Grenville St. and Grosvenor St. in the Discovery District of Downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada.[1][2][3] The redevelopment of the site was part of a period of urban renewal of the Toronto financial district in the early 21st century.[4][5] Toronto City Planning stated that the Burano has "significantly contributed to the improvement of the streetscape and the public realm."[6]

History

Burano was financed by Lanterra Developments.[7] It was designed by Peter Clewes of architectsAlliance,[8] and is located across the street from Murano,[2] another one of his Toronto projects.[9][10] It is named for an island in Italy.[11]

The Burano was designed to be built within the footprint of a heritage structure: a 1925 auto dealership[2][12] which had been designated a heritage structure in 1999.[3] By 2010, the foundations were complete and the building was under construction.[13]

As well as architectural elements from the former building, public art was also incorporated into the Burano, including a large abstract fresco created by Italian artist Sandro Martini installed in the building's atrium, on the side of the heritage building.[14][1][15][16]

McLaughlin Motor Car Showroom

Шаблон:Main Construction of the Burano preserved the facade of the former Samuel McLaughlin's McLaughlin Motor Car Showroom, a two-storey heritage building designated in 1999 under the Ontario Heritage Act.[2] Built in 1925 as the R.S. McLaughlin Building, the Gothic Revival building was one of the first automobile dealerships in Toronto, and remained continuously occupied by car dealerships for eighty-two years.[3] Despite its long history, that use ended as part of a reorganization and consolidation of the car dealership industry in Canada.[17]

Due to the soft soil at the site, and to facilitate excavation, the historic facade was dismantled and stored off-site during construction of the seven-floor underground garage. After the garage and foundation appropriate for the fifty floors above ground were completed, the facade was reconstructed, incorporating the important heritage components.[18]

The historic building is marked with a plaque, placed in 2013 by Heritage Toronto.[19]

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Toronto skyscrapers