Civic Symbol
Creating Toronto's New City Hall, 1952-1966
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Toronto Press
Published:3rd Sep '15
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
"In Civic Symbol, the story of New City Hall's creation gets the book-length treatment it merits. Filled with fascinating stories and photographs, and based on exhaustive research, Civic Symbol is an important book about an important building." -- Mark Osbaldeston, author of 'Unbuilt Toronto: A History of the City That Might Have Been'
Lavishly illustrated with contemporary photographs, plans, and drawings, Civic Symbol is the essential history of this iconic Canadian building.
When Toronto’s New City Hall opened in 1965, it was an iconic modernist symbol for what was still a sedate and conservative city. Its futuristic design by Finnish architect Viljo Revell, composed of two curved towers flanking a clam-shaped council chamber, remains as strange and distinctive today as it did fifty years ago.
In Civic Symbol, Christopher Armstrong chronicles the complex and controversial development of this urban landmark from the initial international competition to the many debates that surrounded its construction and furnishing. Armstrong catalogs the many twists and turns along the path from idea to reality for the extraordinary building that Frank Lloyd Wright claimed future generations would say “marks the spot where Toronto fell.” Lavishly illustrated with contemporary photographs, plans, and drawings, Civic Symbol is the essential history of this iconic Canadian building.
- Winner of Award of Merit awarded by Heritage Toronto 2016 (Canada)
ISBN: 9781442650275
Dimensions: 262mm x 236mm x 19mm
Weight: 940g
224 pages