Toronto1834
Active Member
So is the school included in the redevelopment, or the developer is proposing a land swap?
Here is a video posted on Youtube by Choice REIT
Here is a video posted on Youtube by Choice REIT
Many thanks for posting! I felt guilty having to miss the meeting today, events conspired to make it not possible, but that was *exactly* the question I had foremost on my mind. Castlepoint were sour on it when asked. I can't tell you more than that, but might have more later that I can divulge. I'm led to believe the City dropped the ball on it....A southern bridge over the rail corridor is off the table for now as the property doesn't extend far enough south to be able to land on the MoCA property without a very long, oblique diagonal connection (unfortunately the land that could have accommodated this connection on the other side of the tracks is all going to be townhouses).
This is an unexpected but critical point for anyone who cycles around the area. Both sides of the underpass are suicide slides if remaining on Bloor for cyclists (drain covers shifted just adds to the 'fun' of putting your life at risk) but cyclists barreling along the sidewalks are just as dangerous to pedestrians. And it happens a lot. (On the north side too, some going to the main GO entrance) That they proposed this tells me they *are genuinely* aware of real issues. That impresses me, along with their 'minimal car' approach altogether.Apparently they're looking into the feasibility of widening the south sidewalk on Bloor under the rail underpass, including a dedicated cycling path with a potential ramp connecting to the railpath, so hopefully there will be some kind of reasonable railpath connection. This connection may still be expensive and complex as it will require tunneling under an active rail corridor.
"On top of this wall"...do you mean that high but adjacent/abutting? That would go a long way towards sound abatement, at least in the near-field acoustic shadow. Interesting...the plexi panels aren't working that well, and look like shid...not helped when the graffiti removal chemicals smear them.In order to build up against the rail corridor, there will need to be a fairly tall crash wall, so they're talking about using the space on top of this wall as an outdoor public space overlooking the tracks.
Yes! I noticed that in renders posted earlier. Not to scale, but indicative of what might happen. Since that was drawn, the announcement of the Dundas West-Bloor Stations tunnel has been stated as proceeding. The configuration of that bridge might end-up underground, perhaps sharing an underpass with the connecting bicycle path mentioned.You can also see in that site plan where they are proposing that the GO station platforms be extended south to, and that they'd be accessible from a new bridge above the tracks.
It's curious, if not perplexing, that they're just finishing up massive overdue renos to the school. I can't quite see how it is to be 'assimilated' now, but there might be something new to be announced on that.Also, that white building at the south end with the courtyard in it is where they are proposing the school be relocated. One more reminder that shape of the school, and pretty much everything else, is notional at this point.
Structurally alone it would be extremely difficult to do due to the walls of the underpass also being the weight carrying buttresses for the bridge spans.I can't see the widening of the south side of Bloor St. to be easy in any way at all
Yes, they are working through all of this with Metrolinx already.I wonder if they've talked to Metrolinx at all about their ideas. I can't see the widening of the south side of Bloor St. to be easy in any way at all. I *like* this idea but I have my doubts they can pull it off. I'd expect they would have to take tracks out of service to do this, which won't be easy with the existing train frequency, let alone the planned frequency over the next few years.
They're not talking heights and densities yet. They want to get a ground realm plan that the community likes, then they'll get into the stuff that the community will no doubt complain about. Might as well have general agreement on something first, before having to get into negotiations that will unavoidably anger some people. (Lots of people want something for nothing, right?)One thing missing from today's presentation is any mention of building heights. All renderings were ground level and first few stories, or looking straight down.
It appears to me that Perks is pro-actively involved in this. *So far* this project appears to be a model to envy. Unless the bubble bursts, I'm very impressed with how the developer is working with the public, neighbourhood and good planning principles. I did a quick search to illustrate Perks' stance, and this does it I believe, albeit this is regarding the Giraffe on the NW corner of Dundas and Bloor (an intersection that has to be rationalized, traffic is madness there right now)With Gord Perks as the local councillor this development will be bottled up in planning for years....mark my words
Whoa! I had to do a double take on that until accessing the Quote .Quote from Galen Weston Jr about the project:
The emphasis on pedestrians, cyclists and transit is welcome and needed.
Thanks for that! I'm trying to gauge my optimism, and knowing others see it that way really helps.It's an ideal place for that emphasis, and a way to build more with less impact if they can actually deliver on the ped/bike/transit talk. Such a good opportunity...I hope they can work well with the City and Metrolinx to make great things happen here.