Allandale25
Senior Member
I looked up in the thread and didn't see the July 17th slide deck posted so here it is. cc @Northern Light
Alex from the Globe tweeted about it.
Alex from the Globe tweeted about it.
I looked up in the thread and didn't see the July 17th slide deck posted so here it is. cc @Northern Light
Alex from the Globe tweeted about it.
View attachment 588836
I hold very mixed opinions on this subject.Full column from @AlexBozikovic on the Airport, the Islands, and the opportunity to close the former to create a truly great, much more accessible greenspace.
The only thing holding us back from Toronto’s best park? An airport
A well-run redesign of the Billy Bishop airport lands could create a beautiful, and distinctively Torontonian, space for cultural programming, good food and even some much-needed housingwww.theglobeandmail.com
Good piece.
This is essentially his thesis:
View attachment 588906
From there he goes on to discuss the extensive lobbying by Ports Toronto and Nieuport Aviation to get the City's agreement on RESA and on a long-term extension to the Tripartite Agreement and Airport land lease.
This line is key to supporting his argument:
"The airport moved just 2 million passengers last year; Toronto Pearson International Airport moved 44.8 million."
He follows that with this, a perfectly reasonable ask:
View attachment 588907
I don't think there's any question that the majority of any economic value produced by Billy Bishop would simply shift to Pearson in the event of a closure. That's before considering any offset value created by the closure. Said value isn't just parkland/access/tourism........its the removal of the flight path over a large portion of the Portlands, among other areas.
The airport also owns or occupies land on the mainland side for its corral, and public parking.
Not an opinion regarding the existence of the airport one way or the other, runway safety areas are an emerging standard worldwide. Even Pearson is regarded as sub-standard. Risk management says you don't wait for an incident.This just kind of, well, stupid. Has there ever been an actual incident where a plane went into the lake because it failed to come to a stop? Close the place down or grandfather the runway until such time as electric STOL craft become viable.
Waaaay out of the box indeed. The cost of shore facilities would be pretty onerous for some of the small communities listed. I've seen clips of the Russian Be-200 and would imagine those currently concerns over aircraft noise would be apoplectic with that thing. I'm not aware if any are in commercial service. I would think if such a design was considered commercially viable other manufacturers would be all over it. Most current float and amphibious aircraft are comparatively small and slow.Another thought that came to me was the use of seaplanes. Yes, ok, way outside the box. And in part, the views of the recently retired Martin Mars seaplane (last used in a water bombing role in fire fighting) intrigued me.
So retire the BBA runways etc and open BBSA. The Russians have built large jet powered seaplanes, capable of carrying 70 or so passengers. Think of all the accessible cities - Ottawa right at the Parliament buildings, Montreal at the cruise terminal, Boston Harbour, the East River in NY, the Chicago Lakefront, Bedford Basin in Halifax, the Red River in Winnipeg, Lake Nipissing in North Bay, Gillies Lake or Pearl Lake in Timmins/Schumacher…..the list is endless.
Now service in the dead of winter might be problematic but in the age of technology, I am sure this is something that could be worked on.
And there is nothing like watching a Twin Otter accelerating across the lake or harbour (think Harbour Air in Victoria/Vancouver) to attract the tourists. I think the site of a medium sized passenger jet accelerating across Toronto Harbour would be pretty good tourist attraction as well.
The other interesting thing is that the proponent describes the area as the Island Transport Lands which is new and is an important signal. Btw I see a massive parking garage being proposed here.
This article is from today:
The only thing holding us back from Toronto’s best park? An airport
A well-run redesign of the Billy Bishop airport lands could create a beautiful, and distinctively Torontonian, space for cultural programming, good food and even some much-needed housingwww.theglobeandmail.com
Full column from @AlexBozikovic on the Airport, the Islands, and the opportunity to close the former to create a truly great, much more accessible green-space. This is essentially his thesis:
View attachment 588906
I personally am for the airport and think the people at Wards should be kicked off the island.
What the heck are people doing living on what should be a shared public space? In city owned homes, using sketchy methods to hand the leases of the houses over to friends and family.
It screams of elitism and nepotism and all the things a liberal should be against.