With demolition work on the 114-year-old Stollerys building underway, developer Sam Mizrahi has announced that British architect Norman Foster will be behind the retail and residential building set to rise from the lot. Located at Yonge and Bloor, whatever is constructed in place of Stollerys’ green awnings and Art Deco arches will have to fill an iconic site, so what does a Norman Foster building look like?

You probably know, though. There is already a Norman Foster creation in Toronto. The University of Toronto’s Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy building was designed by the architect and opened in 2006.

Foster + Partners, the architectural firm run by Norman Foster, is also working on the 3C Waterfront redevelopment project on the parcel of land previously owned by Home Depot between Cherry Street and Lake Shore Blvd. E. They were also the firm tasked with designing Oxford Properties’ $3 billion proposed revamp of the Toronto Metro Convention Centre with additional casino and skyscrapers that has since been shelved.

Here’s a selection of Norman Foster buildings in Canada and around the world:

The Bow EnCana building, Calgary

Jameson House, Vancouver

The Gherkin, London

Expo MRT Station, Singapore

Hearst Tower, New York City

Reichstag, Berlin

City Hall, London

Torre Caja, Madrid