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OK, now remove all those that were:
A. Planned or being planned prior to 1988 (take off the first 42 off the list)
B. Started after Toronto addressed its tax rate disparity (take off the last 2)
C. Developed by the city of other levels of government.
Why B) if Toronto is addressing this now and it's enticed new development it's safe to say we *shouldn't* be lagging in the future. Then again there still hasn't been much in the way of suburban Toronto development over the last 10 years.
OK, now remove all those that were:
A. Planned or being planned in April, September & October
B. Started after Toronto repaved Yonge Street between King and Queen
C. Developed by someone left handed.
You do realize that we had a massive overbuild of office and condos in the 80's right? Many major developers (BCED, O&Y, Bramalea, Tridel etc.) went bust in the early 90's because of this overbuild. You don't think that had a major reason why the 90's were a bad time for new construction? It took a decade to absorb all that space.
Those are some pretty ugly buildings in the first one. Are they the ones that were proposed in the 70s to go where old city hall is today? If so, I'm sure glad that didn't happen, those would be quite the concrete mass...ew.
Glen moans about how we're losing all of our employment lands to condos. This is rubbish. How much of the rezoned land was being used as parking lots? Most of it.
That Hemson report assumes future projects at sites like Consumers will build only *surface parking*...surface parking! There's already about 15,000 surface parking spots in the Consumers office park, yet all the city has to do to open up the redevelopment potential of these vast acres of pavement is change its transit policies and extend the Sheppard subway, or simply chip in to the cost of parking structures.
Glen has also forgotten that the Avenues projects will see hundreds of acres of land rezoned to mixed use.
Those converted homes have been there for years. You seem to be making things as you go along.All those houses along Sheppard and Finch that are filled with lawyers and doctors and psychics? Those are recent conversions, with some low-rise employment buildings recently finished and with more to come.
Once again you offer up your opinion as fact, with no supporting evidence at all. You are also ignoring the number of sites that were previously planned as commercial that changed to residential. Along with the fiscal consequences of such.
Not surprisingly you are missing the point of the proformas in the Hemson reports which is....
In the City of Toronto, Most New Development in the
Districts Is Not Economically Competitive
The pro forma analysis suggests that most new development
in the Employment Districts would not be economically
competitive from the perspective of the private landowner or
investor
Yay, will will soon be the world leader in ground floor retail.
Those converted homes have been there for years. You seem to be making things as you go along.
What I have been lamenting, and the point you are missing, is not necessarily the loss of employment land, it is the loss of the commercial assessment base (acutal and relative) and opportunity.
You might want to keep your eye on the news in the next little while. The financial ramifications of Toronto's lopsided growth will be spelled out for you.
Again, you're bitching about the acreage allotted to each land use...you know this allotment changes every year, right? You mentioned countless employment buildings lost to non-employment uses...name them. Parking lots and fields are not employment buildings, by the way. We've already proven you wrong about everything else you've said in this thread.
Yeah, hence the need to extend the Sheppard subway. The city of Toronto encouraged suburban office districts but never built transit to serve them...meanwhile, the 905 encouraged suburban office districts and saw highway projects completed to serve them. Hence the need to tweak the tax policies, to lobby for more corporate HQ and offer creative incentives, and so on...who ever said we shouldn't do all this?
you'll know that low-rise employment buildings are being built along Avenues in addition to condos and retail. Only a fraction of the city is currently Avenueizing, but this is changing and increasing.
The houses have been there for years, but the conversion process is recent and ongoing. Learn to read.
You're bitching about the loss of employment land. We can bolster the tax base in the future by replacing parking lots and 1-2 storey buildings with towers. As if we're going to run out of opportunities to build towers. Duh. Is this stuff too complicated for you?
Toronto's rate of job growth has exceeded its population growth since 1988.
Six million sq ft. of such space was mentioned in the opening post. Try to keep up.
You do realize that the Yonge St. subway has been there for a while, don't you? Yet many planned offices were re zoned to residential and never saw the light of day.
Because you said so?
Nope. Many converted houses have been there for over 15 years. I used to drive by them daily.
I have never said that Toronto has an insufficient amount commercial development sites. It is you who is making this the issue. What I have been saying, and you keep ignoring, is that the very important non residential assessment base not developed, or maintained is relative size. Having potential and realizing it are different things. The financial consequences also seem to be escaping you.
Care to provide some numbers?
That six million was the supposedly lost office space in CityPlace since 1988. Concord's CityPlace didn't even exist in 1988, so your wrath was misplaced, and you've been shown that far, far more than 6M sq.ft of office space was built in Toronto after 1988, including millions of sq.ft of office space in 'CityPlace,' before you childishly changed the goalposts and forgot what the hell you were rambling on about.
Again, where's your list of "countless small office buildings" that were lost?
Since when is the Consumers office park on Yonge? Try to keep up.
Those offices were never planned in the way you think you were. Most of them were just Mel Lastman's long-term dream of "one day, I hope to see Yonge lined with office towers!"
have to say so because you're clueless. Yes, some employment/professional buildings have been built in Avenues zones. Not a million of them, but only a few km of the city has been Avenueized and the redevelopments are far from complete. Drive along Finch or Sheppard and you'll see them. Wait 20 years and you'll see more, on more streets.
The conversions happened before Sheppard being 'Avenueized', or the construction of the subway. Using them of an example of what will happen citywide after 'Avenueizing' and Transit improvements, is false.Subtract 15 from 2010. I'll wait. Is the number higher or lower than 1988? That's what I thought.