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Beloved Japanese cultural building at risk of becoming condos

Beloved Japanese cultural building at risk of becoming condos

CBC
Friday, August 09, 2024 08:57:59 AM UTC

Members of Toronto's Japanese community are fighting to keep a once beloved cultural centre, designed by the famed architect Raymond Moriyama, from being turned into a condo.

Some 75 Japanese-Canadians exiled from B.C. in the 1960s financed the original Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre, in order to honour their ancestry and promote community in their new home in Toronto. 

But in 2021, the building was closed and sold to developer 123 Wynford Inc. The new Japanese cultural centre moved to 6 Sakura Way, a 10-minute walk from the original site. 

Now the developer wants to demolish and reassemble the building and erect a 48-storey condo. 

Lynn Kobayashi, whose grandmother was one of those who helped finance the building, says the developers are not respecting the building's cultural significance and worries the structure won't be properly preserved. 

"As a Japanese-Canadian, I find that totally offensive," the Toronto Chapter president of the National Association of Japanese Canadians (NAJC) told CBC Toronto.

"It would totally misrepresent what the building is. It would destroy the architectural heritage. The building needs to remain intact."

She isn't alone.

City council is also against the developers' plans and has refused their application to alter the building.

In May, 123 Wynford Inc. requested to demolish and alter the heritage site for its project, which also included building a 55-storey tower adjacent to the heritage property. 

Toronto has been trying to maintain its historic buildings like those designed by Moriyama (who also designed the now-shuttered Ontario Science Centre) while also spurring building to alleviate the housing crisis. 

123 Wynford Inc. is appealing council's decision at the Ontario Land Tribunal. Hearings began on Tuesday and are slated to wrap mid-month.

The company declined an interview while the proceedings are underway but said in a statement that "it is our intention and our plan to retain as much of the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre as possible. We have approached this project from a position of reinvention and respect for the original building."

Last month, the NAJC launched a GoFundMe to raise funds to cover its legal fees during the proceedings, surpassing its original goal of $20,000.  Moriyama-Teshima Architects said it a statement that the firm has "not been involved in these efforts and we are not able to comment at this time," but it appears to be involved in some capacity with the condo plans. 123 Wynford Inc. wrote in a statement and on its website that it has been working with the firm during the design process.

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