CBBarnett
Senior Member
Calgary (IMO) has been fairly successful at approving infill like this by North American standards. I am not commenting on the design, density or proportion of overall development but on successfully approving density increases in SFH dominated places - from SFH-dominated to townhome to low and mid-rise (e.g. Marda Loop).Common sense usually prevails. Any community involvement is good. Many times I've seen ideas implemented from the most intense NIMBYs that has improved development. Let them organize. Let them have their five minutes.
The ongoing horror show of lack of housing supply growth in many areas of Toronto and Vancouver, but even more acute in the big coastal American cities (Portland, Seattle, San Francisco Bay Area, LA, New York etc.) has helped create enormous problems of affordability and weird concentrations of development. We are much younger and smaller than all these places - so our pressures are much less - but we are starting to get some decent examples and proposals of low and mid-rise density popping up in places that have never been much more that SFH. 19th, 24th Avenue proposals, Marda Loop, 14th Street, Shaganappi etc.
We still have weird locked-off "yellow belts" (parlance from Toronto planning based on the colour of the SFH zoning maps I think, where essentially non-SFH development has and continues to be banned for the past 50 years, even duplexes) but they form much more into small pockets (Mount Royal etc.) rather than whole swathes of the inner city like they do in other cities. Hopefully with some continued progress on projects like this, we can stave off the calcification of any more neighbourhoods and continue to allow their gradual development and intensification.