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Lecture Three
Physical Development and Change in Collingwood
Most towns are identified
by their physical characteristics, their buildings, streets and
lay-out. It is to these issues that we turn
to today.
In 1855, when the railway arrived, there was almost nothing here.
Hurontario Street had been constructed north from Duntroon and
Nottawa to the Bay, and it
became the main focus for the new town.
Two street lay-outs were proposed by resident William Gibbard, a surveyor,
in 1854, both variations on a theme, and grand. Gibbard proposed locating
the rail
corridor on the west side of the town, so that the centre of the settlement
embraced the depth of the bay and the headland to the east. Both plans were
based on a
regular street system with a variety of lot sizes, with some lots having
direct access to the water on the west side of the headland. The grander
of the plans
proposed a market square with diagonal streets – and a set of noble crescents
to the east, reminiscent of Bath, England. Gibbard was clearly planning in the
Georgian style that had such success in the early 18th century – in Edinburgh’s
New Town, and in its contemporaries, Savannah, Georgian and Charleston, North
Carolina, as well as responding to the designs of John Nash, in London. Gibbard’s
proposed street pattern started at the water’s edge and extended far
enough south to encompass a population of several hundred thousand people.
As a local
entrepreneur, Gibbard obviously hoped to play a financially profitable role
in the expected growth.
But the railway company obviously had other ideas. It wanted the railway
to terminate in a spit which began on the east side of the bay and then jutted
to the west.
It was a more modest plan – a grid pattern of a few blocks to the west
of Hurontario which wrote off the eastern headland. All blocks were very
regular in size: Ten lots long by two blocks wide. Each lot was one chain
wide by two
chains long, a chain (at 66 feet) being the standard measurement for large
public decisions. The streets all had a width of one chain from property
line to property
line. This was the block plan given to the area from the first street south
of the waterfront lots and west of Hurontario Street to the fifth street.
The layout
remains readily identified to this day, in fact the block plan has not changed
in any way.
The area to the east of Hurontario Street was purchased by McMaster and Company,
clearly as a speculative investment, and it was not part of the town’s
formal area. It was the classic case of a good side of the tracks and – on
the east side – an area not so good.
Gibbard ran for the position of mayor in 1858, but narrowly lost out to W.B.
Hamilton, who owned a local bank. Gibbon’s contribution was finally
recognized in the last few decades of the 20th century when Gibbard Crescent,
in the south-west
corner of the town was named after him.
An 1875 sketch shows that the land on the harbour was used for lumbering.
Around the railway, railway and shipping uses predominated. The existing
70 or 80
structures were naturally located on the streets closest to the harbour.
The area to the
east of Hurontario Street – the McMaster holding - was generally outside
of the plan, and not well developed. It would develop in its own way, if
it ever did develop, but the formal part of the town was to the west of Hurontario.
The
town was divided into two parts right from the start, and two results of
this
decision are now apparent. The difference is apparent today.
First, the street pattern to the west is controlled and regular, characteristics
expressed through the naming of streets: Those parallel to Hurontario were
named after trees, those parallel to the shore were numbered. East of Hurontario
was
a different world. The street pattern there is irregular, clearly developed
in response to different needs at different times, and filled with a surprising
variety of uses and structures. Street names were chosen by users over time,
and bear the marks of individual taste.
Second, there was to be no appeal to, or recognition of, natural features
as the focus for the new settlement. The Pretty River and its flood plain
to the
east was consigned to oblivion, and has played no role other than an area
for industry, occasionally suffering from industrial contamination over the
years.
No relationship with the bay was permitted except through the choked harbour.
The headland played no role in the town. This arrangement was readily accepted
for more than a century, as the harbour played a role as a port and locus
of ship-building. There’s no natural anchor to the town. The one place where
the town touches the natural environment of the bay is Sunset Point Park, on
the headland east of the harbour, almost hidden away from the town’s
bustle.
The most extraordinary structure in town at this time was the grain elevator,
built in 1871 to replace the smaller one which stood on the site. This new
building was of wood, and rose from the jetty high and ominously, 80 or 90
feet into the
air. It has a medieval air. The structure was built by the Northern Railway,
whose manager a decade earlier had been Frederick Cumberland, an architect.
Cumberland had designed many memorable buildings in Toronto, including the
famous University
College, and much as one might hope that Cumberland had a hand in Collingwood’s
marvellous elevator, it seems not be the case, although its architect is
unknown. Sadly, this important and historic building was demolished in the
1930s, some
years after the new cement structure was completed.
Most of the buildings constructed in the first decades of the town were made
of lumber - given the very powerful business interests in the area - but
a devastating fire on Hurontario Street in 1881 put an end to many of them
and
they were replaced
with brick buildings. That is when Collingwood’s main street achieved
its distinctive style. Many of the buildings on Hurontario were three stories
high,
with retail at grade and two stories of work space or residential quarters
above. The buildings were invariably flush with the sidewalk so the building
faces created
a memorable sense of space, some of which can still be seen today. In the
style of the time, the street was laid out to be two chains wide, that is,
about
130 feet, compared with most other streets in the town, which were one chain,
or
66 feet wide.
By 1890 the town was economically alive and vibrant with a population approaching
5,000 residents.
To a large extent, it is the buildings erected in the 19th century which
define the character of Collingwood. Very few structures built in the 20th
century after
World War One resonate in the memory: it is the earlier structures which
create the idea of what the town is.
The book by Laurel Lane-Moore and Eileen Crysler, Collingwood: Historic
Homes and Buildings, gives a fine picture of this important part of the town’s
architectural style. Early days saw modest structures, such as the small stucco
cottage on Raglan Street called Kosy Korners, built in 1853 as a log house, then
stuccoed, and since substantially altered. One of the first grand buildings was
the Doctor’s House, built in 1854 at 18 St. Marie Street, one east
of Hurontario. This was a stuccoed wooden two-storey Italianate villa with
a bay
window on the
main floor, a porte-cochere over the main entrance and a large side veranda.
Sadly, this house was demolished in 1983. A large clapboard home at 227 Minnesota
Street is one of the last serious houses constructed of wood - by the 1860s
the serious houses were made of brick, not wood Several examples remain,
such as
the grand Joseph Lawrence House at 492 Hurontario Street.
Houses became more grand and elaborate as those with new money wished to
vaunt their wealth. Examples are the William Foster House, built in 1874,
and Balcarris
on Hurontario Street in 1875 - a glamorous Italianate extravaganza demolished
in 1954, making way for the Collingwood Collegiate.
Other examples of the grand houses built when the town was booming still
remain. One is Elmwood/Dundurn Hall at 241 Third Street, a structure which
was much
grander when the tower and second storey veranda were still intact. The house
across
the street now used as the Ski Academy – a good example of adding new work
to old – is more ebullient. Just up the street at 423, the Peter Heuser
House, built four years later, took the idea of a cottage and made it grand with
lovely moulding and cornices, and a semicircular veranda. William Hamilton’s
1870 house at 224 Minnesota is more severe, Charles Stephen’s 1898
house at 167 more detailed. There are also good examples of vernacular residential
housing, such as Victoria Terrace at 272-80 Ontario, a truly delightful row
of houses.
As the town entered the 20th century the style became less elegant and more
stolid, witness Thurso at 37 Third Street with heavy red stone and rather
chunky pediments
and cornices. The Charles Pitt House at 242 Third Street, with its two-storey
columns is reminiscent of Tara in Gone with the Wind. Bield House, at 64
Third Street, was designed by the influential Toronto architect Eden Smith
who worked
in an English style and built this three storey structure as though it were
a thatched English cottage.
High quality design was also reflected in non-residential structures. The
Exhibition Building of 1885 is marvellous, although sadly demolished. St.
Mary’s Church
of 1888 has a remarkably Presbyterian sensibility to serve the Roman Catholic
faith. The Market Building, proudly built in 1889 as the town’s municipal
building led the way with its rusticated Romanesque arches, sturdy red brick,
and heavy clock tower. The newspaper of the day, The Enterprise, records
that following the laying of the cornerstone for this structure on August
21, 1889,
the mayor and other officials retired to the nearby Globe Hotel for a banquet
of Lake Superior trout, ham, mutton, turkey, goose, and relishes. This is
the building that burned down after open only a few months, and then was
completely
rebuilt. Beside it is a marvellous building with finials pointing to the
sky and fancy brick ornamentation, which includes swastikas. .
Indeed a number of 19th century structures on Hurontario Street remain, and
their architecture still delights. Some are three stories in height, with
decoration
surrounding the windows and a strong cornice at the roof line. There is much
variety in the vernacular, and it creates delight for the eye.
Other buildings in the 19th century style include the Connaught School (1902)
and the Collingwood Curling Club (1909).
The last example of the grand architectural style for Collingwood was the
Federal Building, constructed just before the First World War. The federal
government
always had a presence here, given the importance of Collingwood as a port
trading with American centres on the Great Lakes. This structure made that
presence
visible and substantial. The tall columns, the regal pediment, the sweeping
staircase
drawing people up from the street , the formal grey stone – all exhibit
the federal government’s sense of self-importance. One might say the grandeur
is a trifle overblown – and in any case the federal government has since
stripped the structure of many of its national functions, which may be reflective
of how that level of government sees its relationship to the town. At the same
time, it’s hard not to notice that there is no substantial provincial building
sporting the flag of Queen’s Park.
The Federal Building was constructed even as some of Collingwood’s brave
young men were dying in the trenches of Europe in the First World War. It marked
the years when the town’s economy turned, when the effects of the successful
large industrial enterprises in Toronto were clearly felt, and the smaller industries
in the province’s towns found they could no longer compete. Collingwood’s
shipbuilding continued, but not much else. The town’s economy slipped into
somnambulance. Very few new structures were built in the ensuring decades. The
old structures simply continued since no proposals for change threatened them.
Collingwood’s municipal government did not have a Building Department
during these decades, because little was being built.
There were several exceptions to this observation. One was the new Collegiate
erected with local funds at the corner of Hume and Hurontario Streets – in
the classic English style assigned to schools in Ontario’s 1920s -
and still a powerful symbol in the town. The second was the Terminal Building
on
the waterfront, a utilitarian structure without grace or allure.
One change came during the Second World War. To deal with the critical shortage
of housing, the Federal Government established Wartime Housing Inc., a company
whose job it was to build new homes throughout Canada. Wartime Housing commissioned
architects and housing experts to design a cost-and space- efficient structure:
they proposed a small rectangular cottage with a peaked roof, allowing two
rooms upstairs under the eaves. This became a standard house built by Wartime
Housing
across the country, examples of which remain in many communities.
In 1941, as Collingwood’s economy was revived by producing wartime materiel,
Wartime Housing erected what was known as Victory Village – more than 100
of these small cottages - on Seventh, Eighth and Ninth Streets, on both sides
of Hurontario, including Victory Drive, expanding the town to the south almost
one hundred years after the first town plan had been put in place. Many of these
houses remain, although most have been altered and enlarged. As a ‘starter
home’, the Wartime Housing product has never been seriously equalled.
After the Second World War, the idea of serious land use planning came to
Ontario. Municipalities were obligated to prepare what was called an ‘official plan’ to
lay-out the municipality’s intentions about how growth and change would
be addressed in the coming years. A planning profession quickly grew up,
and a bureaucracy as well, both with their own jargons of densities, uses,
and
units per acre. Collingwood , like other communities, commissioned a planning
firm
to prepare its new plan, and selected Project Planning, headed by Macklin
Hancock who was the principal planner of the successful Don Mills community
in Toronto,
to do the work plan.
The first plan is an unremarkable document Apart from the notation of the
need to diversify industry to “dilute the excessive concentration in the ship
yards,” this first official plan - passed in 1953, did nothing more
than describe the existing physical layout of the town and proposed zoning
regulations
for existing uses. It did not address the future.
Project Planning also proposed a zoning bylaw to control change. Until this
time, the arbiter of physical change was public opinion – one could do what one
wanted with one’s property subject to the opinion of one’s neighbours
and colleagues. This generally had been an effective way of monitoring and
controlling growth and change, but the rise of the independent developer,
without local links
and generally dismissive of local opinion, spelled the end of real community
control. Instead, there would be arbitrary rules which could only be changed
by the municipal council. It was at this time that locally elected councillors
became more subject to the pressures of the development industry than to
the will of the general community. It was a big change to the functioning
of local
government.
In the case of Collingwood, the new zoning bylaw, recommended in 1960 but
not implemented until 1965, stated that about half the developed area of
the town
would be subject to rules stating that only single family houses would be
permitted on lots at least 50 feet wide. This meant that the natural division
of large
19th century residences into smaller units of several apartments was immediately
curtailed, as was the opportunity to sell off parts of a house lot for a
new smaller unit. The effect was to prevent consolidation and infilling,
and to
instead require the town’s physical expansion.
In the 1960s, the Federal employment program brought new large industries
into Collingwood. The new industries located to the east and west of the
town centre,
thus expanding the developed boundaries of the town. They also brought enough
wealth to spawn new housing, which can now be seen on Ninth Street and streets
further south. These houses were in the new style made popular by Don Mills,
built a decade earlier: one-storey bungalows on wide lots. These houses were
not set on curvy streets as in Don Mills, but here in Collingwood were laid
out on the traditional grid pattern of streets established more than 100
years previously.
By 1962, the Town’s consultant, Project Planning, began to voice ideas
about controlling the growth it felt was bound to occur, and an official plan
amendment was proposed and passed. The firm noted its desire “to bring
about controlled expansion of the town development in an orderly fashion. Uncontrolled
development has created problems, including those of sewage collection and disposal,
water distribution and fire protection, while the preservation of parklands bordering
on Nottawasaga Bay needs a clear policy to ensure their retention and improvement.” The
plan stated its intention to encourage industrial activity in the sectors
such as apple and fruit growing, china and pottery, furniture, woodworking
and lumber,
as well as appliance manufacturing. It projected a population of 18,000 by
2000 and proposed widened streets and a better entry of Highway 26 into the
downtown
by replacing a T-intersection with a curve. This plan was one of the first
times city leaders seriously planned for growth, and set out how it would
be accommodated.
The Industrial Commission established in the mid-1960s had purchased a hundred
acre parcel south of Hume Street, between Raglan and Highway 26, but town
leaders were quite willing to abandon their plan and jump at any proposal
that came
along if it represented change. A developer proposed buying part of the industrial
park for residential uses, only to be countered by the National Starch and
Chemical
Company which responded that “no matter how much you warn people about
the disadvantages of locating their residences next to an industrial site, they
do not appreciate these warnings until sometime after they have taken up their
residence.” The proposal faded away. Then, in 1973, an application was
made to build a shopping plaza on the same plot of land, again in contravention
of the plan. Those proposing the shopping plaza used the age-old argument that
the town was about to grow and that the downtown was not the appropriate place
for modern retail space. “The fact that many medium and large enterprises
cannot find adequate space in the town” argued the proponents of the shopping
plaza, “has resulted in a lack of variety of retail merchandise for its
customers. This in turn has caused many people to shop in centres such as Owen
Sound, Barrie and Toronto, where they have a wide selection of retail goods and
more competitive prices.” Economic studies were produced which showed
that the sales potential of the shopping plaza were about $10 million in
1974 and
that the plaza would employ 150 people full-time and a further 50 part-time
and at Christmas.
Downtown merchants opposed the proposal but the Collingwood town council
thought it was marvellous, and gave it their stamp of approval. This was
followed by
an Ontario Municipal Board hearing where two lawyers who have since become
renowned in the development field first tried out their skills: Jane Pepino
for downtown
businesses; and Michael McQuaid for the shopping centre. The Ontario Municipal
Board issued its decision in early 1975, concluding that the shopping plaza
was not in conformity with the intentions expressed in the town’s planning
documents to support the central business district. “Shopping centres should
have an integrating function as between the facility and the community life of
the area,” read the Board’s decision. “To facilitate this aim,
the shopping centre should be located closer to the areas of projected residential
grown and to the existing residential areas which are in the western part of
the town.” The division of the town east and west of Hurontario Street
was still an issue. The Board also noted the objection filed by National Starch
and Canada Mist, and concluded that it “did not find acceptable the
concept of injecting a commercial use into a block of land being used by
heavy industry
with potential for pollution.”
As it turned out this was a momentous decision. If the shopping centre had
been approved there is no question but that the downtown would have deteriorated
to
such an extend that it had no real presence. This has occurred in many other
towns in Ontario where suburban malls have taken all of the business once
attracted to the main street. If it had happened in Collingwood it would
have drained
the town much of its character and sense of community. Undoubtedly many existing
fine structures would have been destroyed. Thank goodness the Collingwood
downtown businesses decided to object to town council’s decision.
At the same time the battle about the shopping centre was being waged, skiing
activity on the mountain was exploding. The dream of Jose Wieder was finally
being realised and both the ski clubs and public ski runs were very busy.
But the town was unable to find a way to incorporate the Blue Mountain, this
extraordinary
natural resource, into its fibre. Just as the town had denied a relationship
with the water from its earliest days and created a town plan which refused
to recognize its existence, it took the same negligent approach to the mountain.
The most direct connection between the heart of the town and the mountain
was First Street, which turned into Mountain Road. Sadly, this has never
become a
grand and wonderful route to this extraordinary resource.
The issue was noted by town officials in the mid-1970s, when studies began
on how the expected development that would come with the burgeoning ski-industry
would relate to the commercial activity centred on Hurontario Street. At
that time, great emphasis was put on the private automobile as the driving
force
behind
new urban form, as it indeed drove the emergence of the shopping mall. The
town expressed its desire, as stated in an 1980 official plan amendment,
to “encourage
the development of the corridor” – this is, the corridor to the ski
slopes – “towards what has been called ‘vehicular oriented
development’ to allow for the development of uses which are not in
direct conflict with the uses on Hurontario Street.”
In brief, it was decided to apply the ‘highway commercial’ zoning
to First Street, allowing all kinds of drive-in restaurants, gas bars, and
other uses which can be seen on the edge of most other Ontario towns. It
is unpleasant,
and did not do justice to the majesty of the ski slopes.
Yet planners can argue that it was the best course of action available. It
meant that the activities on Hurontario Street did not suffer direct attack,
and that
the street continued to prosper. The proximity of the First Street strip
meant that the town’s commercial centre was not compromised, as would
have occurred if the original shopping mall at considerable distance from
the downtown
had
gone ahead.
In short, the planners had come up with a compromise to protect the town.
That compromise continued in the 1980s and 1990s as the highway commercial
strip
was expanded west, across High Street, to permit the construction of a shopping
mall
as an annex to First Street, with an A&P, a Zellers, and soon a new Canadian
Tire store.
Personally, I find the results of the solution distasteful, but I do admire
the attempt to mitigate these unsavoury market forces of the late 20th century.
This
is the least attractive part of Collingwood – but I recognize it has
been contained, whereas in other communities it has dominated and destroyed.
A new demand for housing followed the success of the ski slopes and new suburban
houses for local residents were built at the south edge of town, on curvy
streets that mimicked Don Mills. But accommodation was also needed for the
skiers.
Some chalets were built, but there was a recognition that something larger
was required, perhaps housing that also had a demand outside of just the
winter season.
Bill Stephenson was the man with the vision, and so emerged the Cranberry
Village development along the bay on the west side of town. The town approved
a development
plan for Cranberry Village in 1972, noting that “The bulk of units will
be purchased as ‘second homes’ by people wishing to enjoy nearby
ski areas.” It was the first of many developments to serve this market.
The Town’s 1976 Official Plan had set an objective “to limit the
establishment of any further residential areas directly on the lakeshore” (Section
2,4.b.iii, page 5) but that objective was quietly put to one side. Cranberry
Village was obviously the way of the future.
In 1983, the owners of Kaufman Furniture immediately to the south proceeded
with the development of Mariners’ Haven where condominiums were placed at the
water’s edge so that all owners could have their own dock. The official
plan amendment approving this plan noted: “If the tourist industry
becomes more stable and functions on more of a year round basis, the benefits
to the
local service industry would be substantial.”
Later that decade Cranberry Village was expanded to include boating. The
Town’s
approval noted that “Although labelled a Four Season Recreation Area,
this segment of the south shore of Georgian Bay is deficient in at least
one major
summer activity. Recreational boating facilities are minimal within the area.”
Cranberry Village proposed to address this by including 1,000 new units of
housing to be used at various times of the year, and 700 new berths for small
boats.
Other developments followed with similar plans such as Lighthouse Point and
Rupert’s
Landing, although these included blocks of condominium units as well as houses.
A great deal of housing was built along the bay to the west of the town,
and access to it was entirely by private automobile. These developments did
not
include retail and they quickly put pressure on the downtown because there
was no way
residents living in them could get to the centre of the town without an automobile
which needed a parking space when they arrived there. The same development
patterns began to emerge on the east side of Collingwood, along the bay.
Some attention was given to the idea of redeveloping within the existing
town area, rather than trying to do so at its edge, and where this happened,
the results
were more compact development. The Matthew Co-op project, north of Hume off
Raglan, is one example, making use of the federal and provincial government
housing programs
before they were terminated in the early 1990s. More recently is Old Town,
on the east side of St. Paul Street north of Ontario. This 42 unit development
incorporates
the ideas of New Urbanism. On Ontario Street the garages are relocated from
the front of the houses to the rear so that the street is lined with front
porches
and front doors, thus mimicking development styles of the 19th century.
More recent development is entirely suburban in nature. Land previously used
for agricultural purposes is being transformed to suburban subdivisions.
This is occurring on the north side of Sixth Street, west of High Street.
There are two challenges that this kind of sprawling expansion at the physical
edges of the town creates. First, the town’s defining pattern is quickly
becoming the private automobile. Travel distances are so great that the only
viable way for most people to get around is by means of a private automobile.
Thus, the idea has been voiced that what the main streets needed for success
is more parking – more parking and more transit.
But it is worth looking closely at public transit. Currently in Collingwood,
the public transit system carries about 34,000 passengers a year. The common
measurement for transit is ‘riders per capita’, that is dividing
the total number of rides by the population served. In Collingwood, with a population
of about 17,000, the ridership per capita is 2 – the average resident take
two bus trips per year. I suspect most people never ride the bus and that there
is a very small clientele who rides more regularly. By way of contrast, the ridership
per capita in Toronto is about 175 – the average resident is on the
transit system 175 times a year, or every second day.
Even worse for transit is the cost. The fare is $1.75 per ride, but the cost
of carrying each riders is $3.85, so the subsidy for every rider is about
$2.10. increasing the number of transit riders will increase the subsidy
required.
Public transit breaks even – that is the fare riders are willing to pay
covers the cost of service – if there are 15 or more housing units
per acre. But the densities of new developments in Collingwood are generally
much
lower than that. In most places densities will be in the order of six, seven
units per acre. In Collingwood, with this style of low-density development,
one is required to have an automobile. For those with very limited incomes
this creates
a serious drain on their finances and for those who cannot drive this poses
considerable challenges. The extent of the automobile problem is seen in
the plans now being
suggested for the downtown to devote more land for parking cars. This is
a fast way to make a downtown as dull and boring as a shopping mall. Nevertheless,
one
most deal with this challenge that has been created by low-density sprawl.
The second challenge caused by the relentless onslaught of low density development
is to try to find some way of giving the community a sense of character.
Before suburban sprawl came to Collingwood, the town’s character was
clearly expressed in Hurontario Street and the streets to either side, a
character
that emerged
from the 19th century. There were clear edges to the town - one knew where
it stopped. Now, that is not so clear. No matter where one enters the town,
coming
north-west on Highway 26, north on Hurontario, or east along Mountain Road
or Highway 26, there are signs but there is no clear moment when one feels
that
the countryside is stopping and the town is starting. There are no buildings
or landmarks that mark the entrance to the town. One should not expect to
see a town wall or town gate as may have occurred 500 or 600 years ago, but
finding
some way of marking the edges of the town would do much to create a sense
of character.
At the same time, the creep of suburbia has clear impacts on the natural
environment. The Pretty River, as noted in the lecture on Collingwood’s economy, has
virtually disappeared as a natural feature, save for the fascinating sign now
seen on Hume Street, which says “Pretty River Industrial Park.” The
same seems to be the fate of Black Ash Creek to the west of High Street,
another natural feature which, if development pressures continue, will be
unable to
serve its long term function as a locus of salmon spawning. The edges of
the creek
are now being trammelled by the expansion of the mall at Mountain and High
Streets.
In short, the last 30 years have not been kind to Collingwood. The town’s
strong physical presence is being dissipated in a form of development which
causes other problems of significance. Of course, those trends are not only
seen in
Collingwood, but are exhibited in many other large and small communities
in Ontario. One wishes that they were dealt with more wisely. It is clear
this
development
pattern will be a challenge for Collingwood in the next decade or two. If
it is not addressed, the town will clearly suffer.
One last point about the physical characteristics of Collingwood: The 19th
century buildings in Collingwood are a joy, a constant delight in their form
and detail.
The same cannot be said of what has been built in the 20th century. One of
the few buildings that to my mind stands out strongly as a 20th century artefact
is the former Collingwood Collegiate/Admiral Collingwood Public School, now
boarded
up and ready for possible demolition. It would be a pity to demolish this
very distinctive building that gives so much character to the corner of Hurontario
and Hume Streets. Many other significant buildings built in the 20th century
are discouraging or perhaps unpleasant. For all of its good works, the YMCA
is housed in a building from the 1970s that is, if I might use the phrase,
oppressive
in its exterior design. The General and Marine Hospital is work-a-day in
its
design as is the medical centre just to the north. The 1950’s collegiate
on Hurontario Street looks like it could have been designed for anywhere
in Ontario, and it fails to put on an interesting face for Hurontario Street.
The cinema
is an affront to reasonable design. One distinguishing building from the
end
of the 20th century is the Jean Vanier Roman Catholic High School, which
is clean, strong and almost sleek in its design. A second is the new Admiral
Collingwood
Elementary School, with its nautical themes of life preservers and mooring
posts.
Perhaps the best example of the contrast between the 19th and 20th century
architectural styles can be seen with the Kelsey Restaurant complex on the
north side of First
Avenue. While the 19th century building is tall and elegant with extraordinary
brick detailing, the 20th century building beside is glum and clumpy, and
the brick decoration is forced and without delight. It’s the same contrast
between 351 Hurontario and the Mighty Dollar. During the 20th century we
squandered our architectural heritage. Loblaws and the new liquor store are
just not good
enough.
We are now in a new century. Perhaps steps should be taken to ensure that
there is a high quality of architecture that defines this town. There have
been examples
in the United States where developers have been encouraged to hire innovative
architects to create buildings of lasting design value. One wonders if Collingwood
with its new wealth and strong economy might not decide to consider such
a route. It would help to give the town a character that adds to that of
the 19th century.
In summary, the last fifty years have seen the following trends in Collingwood’s
physical development.
-
The edges of the town have become blurred. It is now impossible to determine
where the town stops and the countryside begins.
- Development has not respected or enhanced the natural features on which
the town depends – the relationship with the bay, with the Blue
Mountains, or with the streams.
- Low density development has created a
serious transportation problem, one which seems likely to destroy the
downtown, which is being over-run
with parking,
and may soon become less efficient and no more attractive than a suburban
mall.
- Very few attractive structures of lasting design interest were created
in the 20th century. The town’s character is determined more and
more by the expanding suburban style than by the imposing 19th century
structures.
These are serious challenges and they result from pressures evident in almost
every other community in Ontario. Unlike the big city where pressures seem
immense and unstoppable, here the scale and scope is more manageable. It
may be possible
that in a place the size of Collingwood, ways can be found to confront these
problems. Or, it may be possible that they will engulf the town. I suspect
much of the answer lies with the actions of the town’s leaders in the
next decade. The future is coming sooner than we think.
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