Skeezix
Senior Member
Cabbagetown level of static preservation should be the exception, not the norm - and have to stand on its own merit. Can we sincerely believe that all the neighbourhoods proximate to the core demands/deserve that level of protection? When even adding a 4s low-rise raises a planning stink?
Let's pull out some numbers - just what percentage of growth has been accommodate by mid-rise developments in designated avenues in the city?
http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2014/pg/bgrd/backgroundfile-69376.pdf
It's pretty safe to say that's not the predominant mode of intensification.
AoD
We might not necessarily disagree here. We both think the city needs to allow more midrise (or even high-rise) development on the Avenues (even beyond the Avenues, since the designation of some arterials as Avenues, and others not, often has more to do with politics than planning), even where the adjacent neighbourhood is unhappy.
It's when you talk about some neighbourhoods deserving protection, others not, that you completely lose me.