I'm not sure what mixed of uses you were hoping for considering it's off the beaten path. I could see a variety store possibly working but that's about it. The walk these owner have to commercial is shorter than mine in my pre-war streetcar suburb. It wouldn't surprise me either if it took most of the community to fill FCP with workers. This is not directed at you but, I get the impression many around these parts expect about a 3:1 ratio of residential towers to office towers to be balanced.
That's Ok you can direct it at me
- I'm not sure what the exact ratio would be, but yes something like that. You're right that if it were condos and offices alone it would take much more, but fact remains many still live in houses throughout the GTA (which btw is completely OK). So it wouldn't be the surrounding community alone that would populate the offices nearb, that would only make up a small component.
I guess I was going on a little rant there. Concord's park place really irks me though, you say this location is off the beaten path but clearly that wasn't. Also off the beaten path is relative to a certain degree. There's nothing stopping us from building roads in the area to provide that sort of infrastructure.
To be fair, this area was a lost cause to start. I say this because if we started over i.e. remove all the buildings west to Yonge (in this area) we now have land that isn't off the beaten path and a mixed use community would be ideal.
If you stop and think about it - other then the waterfront, where is Toronto really building these mixed use communities (it doesn't have to be all offices - I get that, clearly the demand for offices out of the core is extremely low, for whatever unfortunate reason). It's the suburbs in the 905 that are attempting to do things better now.
Maybe the shops at don mills are another example.