Yeah, I kind of agree, we're gonna hit 2 million in approx. 20 years or so, excluding the metro. We've already sprawled out quite a bit so it's either we keep sprawling out or squeezing more people into the existing city limits. Even with a balance between sprawl and inner-city growth, we'll need to stick up more midrises and highrises outside of the Core. If a site like Oakridge in Vancouver can stick up 13 towers in one go, I don't see why Calgary can't have a cluster of half that amount built over a decade or two. It's just a matter of time before we start seeing high-rise nodes start popping up in Calgary. As an example, look no further than the city of Surrey which was infamous for sprawl, undesirable and hardly had any highrises before 2010. In a mere 13 years, it has now begun shaping its downtown, even with the population only growing by roughly 200,000 people.
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I believe that a change in the federal government, possibly leading to increased pressure on Calgary to relax strict land use bylaws around transit hubs, combined with a continuous rapid population influx into Calgary, changes in parking minimum requirements, rising costs of detached homes, and the potential for the next cycle of interest rate cuts, may all contribute to unlocking a wave of high-rise developments outside of the Core, perhaps starting from 2025/2026 onwards. It's just inevitable as a city gets bigger and more expensive to live in.