While exploring Queen Street I felt a divide between the hostile scale of the Institutional buildings of the Center for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) shadowing unused green spaces and the quaint masonry storefronts across the road. On the other side of the street, the boutiques and galleries seemed welcoming, and populated. One must recognize the social implications of this stark division. The texture of CAMH pushes away outsiders and ostracizes the people who are treated in the center. In hopes of addressing this issue I propose tilting the unused park plane to relate to building scales on both sides of Queen St. Tilted Planes would create a space that could foster positive friction between the variant demographics of the area. Imagined as a play structure, the continuous topographic folds of the project are meant to be explorable spaces of different scales, humanizing the vacant lot.