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Looks like something is happening here in Rosenthal, does anyone have any info on it?
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Isn't this just a bunch of more apartments? Same as west of 218st

Perfectly "close" and yet too far from the new 3 billion dollar LRT to not actually serve. Such planning!
Just a little bit further west to connect to the $300 million rec center and new apartments. In my perfect world it could be elevated over the roundabouts
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Isn't this just a bunch of more apartments? Same as west of 218st

Perfectly "close" and yet too far from the new 3 billion dollar LRT to not actually serve. Such planning!
When you say same as west of 218 street, do you mean the same developer or just the same type of housing? I'd love if it was the same developer because I think those Edison apartments are pretty nice
 
Just a little bit further west to connect to the $300 million rec center and new apartments. In my perfect world it could be elevated over the roundabouts
View attachment 714603
I think a stop at winterburn road would also serve a good chunk of medium density as well, and you could push the rec center station a bit further west. (In paris they run trams right through the middle of the traffic circles, if elevated is too expensive.)
 
My husband and I walked to Triffo theatre for the ballet yesterday and as we walked along 106 Street, between 98 Ave and Jasper, I really noticed how classy and timeless many of the 70s buildings are. Not flashy, simple design, good harmony, mainly brick, and not at all dated. Made me wonder why we can't keep doing what works but keep trying to reinvent the damn wheel with all the patchwork finishes and bizarre design choices of the new builds. Clean lines and simple finishes age so well, developers should really walk around and look at some of these buildings. They may not get a lot of love because they're so unassuming but give me that over the 90s turrets of Michener Park or the mishmash cladding or weird ass faux Mondrian grids of almost every other recent new build.
 
Just a little bit further west to connect to the $300 million rec center and new apartments. In my perfect world it could be elevated over the roundabouts
View attachment 714603
I don't see this expansion happening when you could serve all of 124th st for less money with a spur. The reality is that an elevated section along with a new TPSS is going to be prohibitively expensive. The rec center should have been placed just north of Weber Greens by Lewis Farms TC.

Huge miss.
 
^^ It reminds me of the era of the 2 & 3-storey walk-ups of the 60s and 70s (a previous time of rapid population expansion in Edmonton)... a hideous collage of urban ugliness -- and the same arguments are heard today: they are necessary to meet a strong rental demand; the City needs to grow more with an intensified core densification; it will help the City Admin and many of their programs with population consolidation in the core; quality architecture is the least important of these goals. And most just don't seem to care, particularly those in the development game who are armed with abundant excuses in justification of this horror.
 
^^ It reminds me of the era of the 2 & 3-storey walk-ups of the 60s and 70s (a previous time of rapid population expansion in Edmonton)... a hideous collage of urban ugliness -- and the same arguments are heard today: they are necessary to meet a strong rental demand; the City needs to grow more with an intensified core densification; it will help the City Admin and many of their programs with population consolidation in the core; quality architecture is the least important of these goals. And most just don't seem to care, particularly those in the development game who are armed with abundant excuses in justification of this horror.
It is also very short term thinking. While there is an influx of people and demand, you can get away with building something quick and cheap looking, but when that demand starts to slow people will become more choosy about where they want to live and will pick nicer places instead. You can already start to see rental vacancy going up, projects need to be designed to be viable for decades in potentially different markets not just the current one.
 

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