ksun
Senior Member
There should be for all intents and purposes no limit to building heights downtown. If you want low density you have almost the entire city to live in. Why deny those who want as densely populated a downtown as possible the chance to have one? It improves virtually every aspect of life for those who like that sort of life. And for those who don't, you can move a a couple subway stations further out and live in your ideal density nabe.
Yep, that's exactly what I think.
Downtown is only 3% of Toronto. If one doesn't like ultra density and thinks 70s towers suffocate you, fine, the rest 97% of the city is entirely for you to choose from. There is almost no limit for how low the density could be. Enjoy your tree lined serene streets with nothing but perfectly preserved Victorian houses, listening to bird chirp at dawn and watching squirrels frolicking at dusk. That's totally fine. There is tons of places offering that in Toronto.
However, let downtown grow to be the kind of high density area for those who like high density/noise/24 hour activity. We don't mind the noise. We don't mind the tacky Dundas Square billboards and all the light pollution. We don't expect "elbow space" on the streets. When I say density, I don't mean Liberty village kind of density - that is a very low bar. I mean Hong Kong/Manhattan/Tokyo kind of density, where practically every single street is mixed use and every building is between 5 and 100 stories.
Honestly anyone who thinks downtown is "very dense" must be out of this mind. Go talk a walk on Jarvis street, or Beverly Street, or Bathurst st, and all the side streets between John/Beverly and Bathurst, and those between Jarvis and Parliament, count how many buildings are lower than 3 stories and tell me our downtown is already "very dense". Downtown is 18 sq km, with 200,000 people. That's far from dense. Maybe so for someone from Oshawa or Windsor. Give it three times more and I wouldn't call it too crowded.
I am not proposing height just for the sake of having skyscrapers. But more residents bring more demand for retail and entertainment, more restaurants, increase of walkability as well as need for better transit. It also makes a city safer. This past weekend the Buskfest made Yonge between Queen and Carlton an extremely busy sea of people - this is what cities are supposed to look like, and I loved it and thought, wouldn't it be nice if more streets are like this and for a good half time of the year? Why are Jarvis and University almost completely devoid of people and retail for example? They should be as busy as Yonge or Queen W. Of course by adding density I don't mean to create more Bay St like dead zone. Whoever allowed that kind of planning should be fired and put in jail.
If one thinking "oh, no, this is too crowded and I don't have enough elbow space", well, all you need to do is take the subway/streetcar to a few blocks north of Bloor or east of DVP, there is as much elbow and breathing space for you as you want.
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