Tony Spilotro
New Member
Agreed but not these 2 buildings
Read what I wrote balenciaga, I suggested nothing of the sort about not wanting more people downtown and more in the 905. With what is going up now and proposed we're looking at well over 100,000 units, how are all these people going to move around? The moratorium comment on dt growth was made in jest - partly. We are growing far too rapidly IMO plus we are going to regret some big mistakes that are being made in the near future. Transit is also decades behind where it should be to carry current and growing volumes of people.
I agree with most of your posts, but this is the one thing I don't get. There are no charming Victorian houses in North York or Scarborough. North York and Scarborough's houses are mostly post-WWII and rather boring, not to mention lower density and much less walkable than lowrise neighbourhoods in much of Old Toronto. Even the oldest neighbourhoods of North York and Scarborough have homes that are mostly from the 20s (not Victorian), which are much more plain looking than many of the 19th century homes in the core. The nicest Victorian homes of Toronto are largely in the areas in and very close to downtown like Cabbagetown, the area between Church and Parliament, a few neighbourhoods between St Clair and Bloor (like The Annex and Rosedale), and Parkdale. Honestly, I'm not sure you know very much about architecture... the pretty old houses people are worried about are not from the 20s but from I think about 1860-1900.Here is a suggestion from me: if one hates high density and love low rise Victorian houses, move to the suburbs in North York, or Scarborough. Those charming neighbourhoods are everywhere.
Sure, the small condos being built today aren't big enough for families, but there are plenty of single family homes outside downtown that are big enough. Families with children are an increasingly small portion of households now, I think there is more of a need for new units for small households. Larger condos could be built, but they will inevitably be more expensive.Downtown infrastructure is already an issue.
I think you overestimate the number of people who live downtown and don't use a transit. My friends and co-workers who live downtown still use transit on a regular basis to get to work etc.
Why the arbitrary decision to allow highrise construction within 10 minutes of a walking distance of a subway south of Eglington?
Why not north of Eglington? If you think we have too many flat suburbs why not starting building highrise developments there? Why can't there be a mixture of lowrise and highrise development in the downtown core?
We need more diversity in our development to allow for different types of people's needs. This is one of my problems with the current condo development - they are overwhelming 500 -800 square feet boxes suitable for 1 to 2 people. What do they do when they decide that size doesn't fit their needs? Where are they going to go?
I'm all for increased density but with out proper infrastructure and planning its a recipe for disaster, and we will not have a city where people want to live.
Anyone get the feeling balenciaga is an infamous x-member that ranted about destroying "WASPy" Toronto's heritage? (May be wrong but do get similar vibes.
I'm turning my NimbyTect attention span to this site, here's an early look at the direction I'm headed.
I think there's huge potential just off Yonge Street. Example: all those tower-in-park-apartment buildings could either be replaced by wall to wall midrises or have their empty "yards" filled with 4-8s buildings.
A case in point is Bathurst St north of Queen. Being literally a downtown street, it looks like a complete suburb, lined with nothing but two story homogeneous houses all the way to Bloor and beyond (and they are not as grand as many on Jarvis, which are indisputable heritage). I think it is a huge waste of space. Maybe you think they are heritage as well but I just don't see it that way. I would rather have all midrise apartment buildings ranging from 6 to 12 stories allowing a lot more people to be able to live to close to the core rather than this boring stretch of houses serving nobody but a couple hundred privileged who happen to inherit the house from their parents.
No, I am not that person you were referring to.
As to the merit of this proposal - well, a mid-rise is certainly arguable for this site - but a 40s tower almost right to the edge of Yonge smack in the middle of the stretch? Not really.
AoD
It doesn't shock me one bit that balenciaga constantly gets scolded on this site. Everyone who speaks out against the status quo and supports any form of increased density is automatically labelled a "skyscraper geek" and is shunned here.
Why preserve 1 storey bungalows on a major artery in the heart of the country's biggest city? There are literally 10s of thousands of these houses all over. Why not go to Etobicoke or Scarborough and save their examples of elitist, private transportation oriented residences? Toronto is doing a great deal of work improving its street level urbanity, and it seems there are plenty of people who want to see that reversed. Protecting townhouses on Yonge Street?? Supporting "apartment in the park" wastelands?? What's next, supporting plazas with giant parking lots? Sorry for being off topic, but I felt like I should add my 2 cents to this conversation.
Yet another development proposal on Yonge Street that is just brutal at street level. Essentially two retail entrances on the corner for one retailer, where previously it hosted 6.
This is not acceptable.
http://app.toronto.ca/tmmis/viewAgendaItemHistory.do?item=2013.TE21.47