Xray_Crystal_Junkie
Senior Member
Exactly.
The difference being that Allied/Riocan look to their development in terms of how it suits a growing residential community surrounding its lands, and the mall associated with the casino looking to suit (and essentially partially subsidized by) the next door casino business.
Its mind boggling that people actually move into the hood with intentions to suck the life out of the city.....Nuts
Of course you are going to support Allied/Riocan, cause you are all anti-casino
but what puzzles me and you know very well, is that Allied/Riocan will ask for twice or triple the density that is allowed for that area, then you and your chums will all be preaching on how the developers, and the OMB, are these monsters in cahoots trying to destroy this growing residential community , when trutfully this downtown west growing residential community is an area of, FASHION, ENTERTAINMENT, SPORTS, THEATERS, CLUBS, RESTAURANTS, ETC. ETC. ETC....
I dont disagree with mixing residences in these areas, but come on,... an ENTERTAINMENT/CONVENTION CENTRE-CASINO at that Front Street location makes a lot more sense than the Allied/Riocan proposed MALL at this Globe location
Hey, Toronto is not sleepyville anymore, and if people want to move that close to the action
than they should be able to tolerate it, if not they should be looking at living at other quieter locations
Its mind boggling that people actually move into the hood with intentions to suck the life out of the city.....Nuts
Of course you are going to support Allied/Riocan, cause you are all anti-casino hat puzzles me and you know very well, is that Allied/Riocan will ask for twice or triple the density that is allowed
n trutfully this downtown west growing residential community is an area of, FASHION, ENTERTAINMENT, SPORTS, THEATERS, CLUBS, RESTAURANTS, ETC. ETC. ETC....
Hey, Toronto is not sleepyville anymore, and if people want to move that close to the action
than they should be able to tolerate it, if not they should be looking at living at other quieter locations
Its mind boggling that people actually move into the hood with intentions to suck the life out of the city.....Nuts
The difference being that Allied/Riocan look to their development in terms of how it suits a growing residential community surrounding its lands, and the mall associated with the casino looking to suit (and essentially partially subsidized by) the next door casino business.
So you're trying to argue that there would be a different type of retail for each development with no overlap? That doesn't quite compute.
The situation only exemplifies the fact that investors and developers are less likely to bring their capital to this area if a casino gets built where proposed.
I worry that putting the casino where Oxford wants it (by far one of the safest parts of downtown) would lead to an increase in robberies, shootings, violent altercations, etc. And that a greater percentage of residential units immediately adjacent to the casino would be taken over by drug-related or other forms of organised crime.
Since the area is scheduled to get a school soon and is successfully attracting families to the area, I don't think gambling with a casino there makes any sense. Toronto doesn't need the revenue and the risks are greater than any benefits. MTCC should be redeveloped into something that enhances the quality of life of the 30,000+ people who will call this neighbourhood home by the time the dust settles, and this proposal falls short.
Or just reduce them in height to 40-50 stories to fit with Toronto's official plan. If these buildings are sculptures they will be even more beautiful to those who live in them at a height of 150m than at a height of 300m.
Having these at that height, across from the Ritz-Carlton and next to Theatre Park and TIFF's Lightbox would be sublime.
I mean, can you really appreciate FCP at street level? I can't, and I would like to be able to fully take in all these beauties as I walk along King.