Obviously, the geographic context is important in this debate.
But, as far as downtown Toronto is concerned...
Flip this argument around.
Sure.
Why should the preferences of a few dozen people who presently live in a neighborhood prevail over the housing needs of a few (or many) hundred others who would love to call that same neighborhood home in the future?
The problem I have with this statement aside from being erroneous as pertains to numbers.....on the site specific level is:
1) Who here suggested no development or intensification with everything frozen in time? No one, that's who. The idea that its hirise or bust and that you can't deliver reasonable unit sizes or sympathetic hirise architecture is wrong.
This is not a matter of leaving SFH anywhere, this site (Mirvish Village was almost entirely commercial. No one suggested replacing with with 19thC Victoria SFH or duplexes.
The debate point was one of delivering housing and communities in a style that appeals to more people, in sizes that are more practical for families.
There is a lot of in-between space. The suggestion that someone is being unreasonable and obstinate because they don't think every block should be a modernist hirise is too much.
It's gatekeeping, it's selfish
But wanting to live in the very same area is not? Of course it is; its all self-interest. The question if one of balancing competing self-interests.
and it's an attitude we desperately need to change as our population increases.
As I've stated many times, we don't need to increase our population. The fertility rate would have us decreasing.
I would prefer a world with 3 billion humans not 8.5 billion. I will reiterate, I'm not talking about some sort of mass cull, just allowing the population to fall to a more reasonable level.
The idea that we must grow, because we must grow, because we must grow is entirely wrong. Its not environmentally sustainable and results in a deteriorating quality of life, longer commutes, higher land costs etc.
For those who prefer a big property and yard, the suburbs exist to accommodate that.
No one is suggesting that every person gets 1/2 an acre of land and a ranch style home, at the corner of Bloor and Bathurst.
Your desire to take this to utter extremes makes a conversation extremely challenging.
The Annex is already a dense neighbourood with mixed tenure, apartments, houses, rooming houses, townhomes, condos etc. No one suggested replicating suburbia here, my goodness.
And frankly, if we unlocked more land for higher density housing (as it becomes available), we'd make it more feasible for builders to offer large 1,000+sf units at lower price points because land costs would decrease... and perhaps with more activity, development charges could too.
Except this isn't true. We've already done that lots of times, and developers have consistently delivered the same small units at ever inflating prices.
This is true, because:
1) We've grown the population faster than the housing supply. (which was a choice)
2) We've permitted investor-driven housing markets that have little or nothing to do with providing livable housing but a more akin to a ponzi-scheme or a Vegas-betting regime on credit.
3) Developers are profit-driven and have no desire to build units cheaper, as that would mean less profit, why on earth would they do that? They aren't running a charity.
4) We don't require minimum unit sizes
5) We only 'nominally' require 10% 3 bedroom or greater units, when to accommodate families in multi-res housing the number needs to be at least 25%
*******
This is not a case of people advocating for suburbia downtown, it is not anti-development Nimby'ism or wholesale opposition to intensification or height.
It is, if people allow it, a discussion about reasonable transitions, about compatible architectural styles, about building what most people want and need not what makes the most profit.
PS, I've led the charge of higher as-of-right heights on main streets, for ditching parking minimums, for mid-rises on the Avenues, and I rent and live in a hirise, so please, ditch the gatekeeping nonsense.