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Superstar
Interesting shots of the area NORTH of Lake Shore - how much more excavation are they doing on the west side of the Don for the debris area??
I think of myself and pride myself on being pragmatic and balanced. That's not to suggest I get everything right in that regard every time, but I certainly try to.
I am really surprised by this comment, especially from someone as well read as you. Map:There is no proposed streetcar route to TTP. None.
Here's what I don't like about your arguments. The slightest obstacle and you're calling the plan unfeasible. Here's my approach as an engineer: Let's be pragmatic about the situation. How do we ensure that the people of Villier's Island have even more than their already ample access to green space? Give them a pass to use the ferry for free. Let's do the same for everyone below the Gardiner since they also deserve local accessible green space. Let's make that whole route free since I can't really picture people from outside downtown going to Villiers to access the island. Let's build that drawbridge that was proposed! Let's make it a streetcar track with a loop at Ward's beach! Let's incentivize water taxis here, let's build another tunnel (kidding). Let's get it done! Let's brainstorm a better city together!how does it resolve the problem of a fare to access the neighbourhood park?
We're about to double our ferry fleet.
We are? Seriously, I read the budget every year, this is the first I've heard of this........maybe I missed it, please provide a link.
Listen I don't think you're out to lunch. You're obviously very well read and I respect a lot of your posts on here, but I found your response to my suggestion of 25,000 units on Villiers fairly exaggerated and sensationalist, and I have spent a lot of time now explaining why. Is 25k units ideal? Definitely not. But with the amount of infrastructure we're paying for here (by your measurement $10B), and it's proximity to a city/jobs/more infrastructure), plus the fact that the public owns 90% of the land, we have an opportunity here to make a massive dent in our housing crisis, in a beautiful park-filled setting, free of NIMBYs, and out of the way of most people's commutes making it easier to do things at such a large scale. I won't argue anymore, but summarizing your assumptions about a 25k unit Villier's, you pull together every worst case scenario as if there is no control or oversight to the outcome, and state is as fact because of your vast experience and knowledge. I just don't think that's fair, or expected from someone like you.But if you're going to argue I'm out to lunch, I'd like to see your homework. (evidence, math, anything that actually supports your position.)
Interesting shots of the area NORTH of Lake Shore - how much more excavation are they doing on the west side of the Don for the debris area??
As has been demonstrated, introducing all these extra elevators, schools, and any non-dwelling space stretches your floor space thin. It results in taller and wider towers with fewer setbacks.If you suggest you are pragmatic and balanced, you MUST admit calling it an immediate SLUM was a bit over the top. "elevator waits of up to 45 minutes", that's an issue of elevators/units, not the total island population.... at all. I would never live in a condo building, but if I had to, I wouldn't live in a building above a certain unit/elevator ratio. "Hour long drives to schools"... again, complete fabrication. Simply put 2-3 schools on the island or adjacent. Put them in the podiums of towers for christ's sake. It's not impossible. Across the river in two directions (south and east) are lowrise proposed employment districts. Lots of room for overflow of services for Villiers.
I commend the enthusiasm but we’re surpassing a particular signal-to-noise threshold here. Broad idea generation is great but there is also need for thorough, holistic designs and so scrupulous review is typical here.Let's get it done! Let's brainstorm a better city together!
Thanks for replying with reasonable arguments and for not being needlessly sensationalist.As has been demonstrated, introducing all these extra elevators, schools, and any non-dwelling space stretches your floor space thin. It results in taller and wider towers with fewer setbacks.
If you look through the traffic projections from most recent slides (I believe NL posted screens here in the past week) you’ll understand the LRT and road connections are planned with ~9000 residents (sans jobs & visitors) in mind. Let’s also imagine vertical circulation and public services are designed to support that same estimate. If the population increases beyond that, it is easily observed how quality of life falls off (low availability of elevators, transit, services, windier & shadier environment) and the cost to combat these issues becomes increasingly expensive (sacrifice floor space, and stack more floors on top to reach occupancy targets).
I commend the enthusiasm but we’re surpassing a particular signal-to-noise threshold here. Broad idea generation is great but there is also need for thorough, holistic designs and so scrupulous review is typical here.
It’s not that we don’t want to rock the boat, but making acceptable design alternatives usually requires some conformity. Best progress is made with incremental changes, the harder we push boundaries the more time we spend debating and not executing. Then it’s all just noise.
Presentation Materials are now online.
From the above:
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Conceptual Render:
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This (below) is very good work, praise-worthy. It actually tests all the different permutations of height/massing, particularly podium levels and their impacts on sun access.
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One may recall that a concern I expressed over jacking density here is that the level of planned transit would not support it: The modelling certainly points in that direction, like with the Golden Mile.
That does not mean one can't do higher density here, but there if you want higher density you must plan (and deliver) the appropriate level of transit and other supporting infrastructure.
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There are a lot more slides if you follow the link, but only so many can be placed in one post.
Those sidewalks were finished just after Christmas, as was the Cherry lighting.So it looks like the sidewalk on the north side of Commissioners is basically done. Also the pedestrian lighting along Cherry is installed. Taken 30 April.
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Amazing photos, as always. Did you happen to flyover the Leslie Spit Lookout Park by chance? It looks like it's shaping up beautifully.Two shots from today. Villiers Island really is an island now.
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And then with this quick photoshop below, you can really see what it'll look like with the plug removed and the Don River flowing freely into the Lower Don Lands.
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