Ladies Mile
Active Member
It's a bit like Battery Park City, no? Although I must admit that BPC addresses the Hudson and the harbour quite beautifully.
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But a lot of the retail is sterile -- realty offices, bank branches, chain fast food... and some struggle to stay open. A video store on Front Street closed and the smoothie shop that replaced it only lasted about a year before closing as well. It's clearly not an ideal location for stores geared to pedestrians.
I'd argue that the location on Front St most definitely a contributing factor to the problem, at least in this point in time. It's uninviting, extremely traffic-heavy, windy, and reeks of sewage. This will hopefully change when the other corners are developed. Until then, this corner + badly designed retail spaces = vicious cycle of retail death.The location is obviously not the problem on Front. The problem is the size and other qualities of the sterile little cubicles themselves, as well as the extremely-counterproductive awnings that almost completely block the signage while not blocking any rain or sun.
Banks (and stores like pharmacies and chain coffee shops) are going to occupy major corners pretty much everywhere, so the only way to avoid them is to build a circular road with no breaks in the retail.
One big problem along Spadina is the limited pedestrian movements at intersections...and the mammoth size and oppressiveness of the roadway itself.
You're optimistic. I'm afraid that it might just end up like so many north Toronto / North York condo building areas. Antiseptic and uninteresting... like it is now.
I'd argue that the location on Front St most definitely a contributing factor to the problem, at least in this point in time. It's uninviting, extremely traffic-heavy, windy, and reeks of sewage. This will hopefully change when the other corners are developed. Until then, this corner + badly designed retail spaces = vicious cycle of retail death.
Anyway, my point was not to pity the lame retail that's there, but that a substantial ~Boutique Shopping Experience~ here isn't necessary at all. Drugstore, grocery store, some other necessities, fine, but retail should not be the universal solution to enlivening a neighbourhood. Especially when there are concentrated shopping thoroughfares nearby (King, Queen, Spadina)
I should be clear about my comparison - the area along Front Street East and north of that is a fine-grained intriguing area with a variety of building types, built over the course of many years and continually added to. My comparison is with the buildings along the Esplanade, built 1978-1982 (with some stragglers after) and frequently cited (here and elsewhere) as a good example of urban planning. If there is a difference between CityPlace and the Esplanade in any significant way other than the mix of ownership and building form, I'm not able to see it.
I think the form is what makes most people give it a pass. It's a nice looking area with a lot of nice shops, etc. Even though it isn't the most lively area, there's a certain charm to it.
CityPlace lacks that.
spadina car north to Queen, Queen car to downtown. Voila. No big deal.