Gronk!
Senior Member
The CBC news piece is about 2 or 3 months old but it's now nationwide
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I stayed downtown for a couple of nights and walked around a lot. One general observation that hit me is that downtown is still extremely car-oriented. The traffic, more than anything else, makes it fairly unpleasant to walk.
What’s interesting to me is that we actually have way less traffic than Vancouver and Toronto. Those downtowns are often bumper to bumper, light to light. Alley crossings get blocked constantly, people run reds or get stuck in intersections.I stayed downtown for a couple of nights and walked around a lot. One general observation that hit me is that downtown is still extremely car-oriented. The traffic, more than anything else, makes it fairly unpleasant to walk.
Examples from Van. Would love to see us narrow more roads, widen sidewalks, add street parking, have boulevards, plant more trees, bike lanes, etc.What’s interesting to me is that we actually have way less traffic than Vancouver and Toronto. Those downtowns are often bumper to bumper, light to light. Alley crossings get blocked constantly, people run reds or get stuck in intersections.
But what makes them still better is that the streets are smaller. 2-4 lanes at max, and rarely left turning lanes. So the area feels tighter and has that nice enclosed, urban feel. Our streets are often 4-8 lanes wide and we have a ton of holes in our “street walls”, making the area feel barren and boring vs busy and lively.
The cost of SFH is an issue but really not the biggest problem. Downtown living can have a lot of appeal for instance for people that want to walk to work or to nearby stores. Oh I forgot, not lot of corporate offices downtown here and currently lots and lots of empty store fronts. If you are going to have to drive to the Bay, Simons, H&M, Old Navy or McDonalds anyways, why live downtown?Sometimes I feel like I am shouting into the wind, but here are two thoughts on this:
1. One of the biggest issues for the downtown in Edmonton is the cost of SFH, which is much lower than other cities. Why would a person buy a condo in the centre when they can still afford a larger house? There are some people who truly like urban living, but I can guarantee you that many people scrimping to afford a condo in Toronto would kill to be able to buy an entire house. Downtown will only really hit its stride when people are forced to choose between long commutes or a central condo.
2. Urban design isn't perfect in Edmonton, but the city has come a very long way in the past 10 years. Almost every neighbourhood renewal has included road diets, wider sidewalks and bike lanes. The real problem is arterials, which seem to get refurbished much more slowly and leave a bad impression if you only ever drive around the city.
I disagree. Urban design in downtown Edmonton is a huge problem. The area looks and feels shabby. If the city won't invest sufficient money to improve the public realm, why should private money be expected to invest?Urban design is also not a big problem.
But it's a vast improvement over the previous streetscape and an important connection between our Arts/Civic Centre and Entertainment Districts.Take for example areas an area where money has been spent to improve the street scape on 103 Ave between 100 and 101 St. Is is any more lively, has anything changed other than wider sidewalks and some benches? Nope
The conceit of urban planning is actually one of the reasons the real problems fail to get addressed.