I am pro-transit, take the GO everyday, and have used carsharing/bikesharing services. Would like the balance of car-vs-transit balance tipped a little more towards better and faster transit. But honestly, even myself, I think tearing down the Gardiner is sheer lunancy.
Burying the Gardiner is a silly idea. IMO it's as pie-in-the-sky as the plans to put a park above it. I don't know why so many support such an expense. Perhaps 2-3km right in the core...but even then it doesn't seem worth it. As it stands, the focus of the Gardiner is east of Jarvis, with the options being:
Maintain the elevated expressway
Improve the urban fabric while maintaining the existing expressway
Replace with a new above or below grade expressway
Remove the elevated expressway and build a new boulevard
For the last ~6mths the hot topic is to specifically replace and realign the section between Cherry and the DVP to open up land for development at the old Unilever factory in the 'East Don Lands'.
Personally I think Replace is the best option. What I'd love to see, as I've posted earlier, is for an elevated rapid transit streetcar line to be built in conjunction with this replacement. Not as some crazy multi-leveled structure (although that would be cool). But merely an expressway and EL side by side.
'Improve' is an interesting one. I think there are simple fixes which could really help how the expressway presents itself - both for drivers using Lake Shore, or pedestrians. This doesn't have to be costly eco-art installations; but rather simple things like lighting, brightly coloured paint, and landscaping. However, if the consensus is to rejig the section east of Cherry to the DVP, I figure why not go all the way and replace the section between Jarvis and Cherry as well.
My problem with the report is that the Remove option makes the "boulevard" into a joke. They actually show on-street parking in the image. How can a 6-lane expressway and 6-lane highway turn into a 5 lane street? As long as sidewalks and cycling paths are kept well away from the roadway, there's no reason the Remove option can't keep Lake Shore as the pseudo-highway it currently is. The roadway allowance is enormous, and I can't comprehend why the City is insistent that the narrow marginalized strip between the Gardiner and rail corridor be developed. Even with the elevated structure removed, it shouldn't be developed.
And London doesn't have a ring expressway...it's a road system with traffic lights - just as Lake Shore would be with the Gardiner removed.