The Politics of Vacancy: The History, and Future, of Toronto's Condo Euphoria

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This article was originally published on ArchDaily on 13 February 2018. 

The City of Toronto has a long, fraught relationship with development and vacancy. The map of the initial Toronto Purchase of 1787 between the Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation and the British Crown, which would later establish the colonial territory that became Toronto, conceives of the landscape as a single, clearly defined vacant lot anxious for development. Or, as artist Luis Jacob better described it, “signifying nothing but an empty page waiting to be inscribed at will.” Over two-hundred years later, as housing availability, prices, and rental shortages drive vertical condominium developments in the city, the politics of the vacant lot have never felt so palpable.

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Cite: Evan Pavka. "The Politics of Vacancy: The History, and Future, of Toronto's Condo Euphoria" 06 Nov 2018. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/888159/the-politics-of-vacancy-the-history-and-future-of-torontos-condo-euphoria> ISSN 0719-8884

© Manuel Alvarez Diestro

多伦多产权公寓急速扩张的历史与未来

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