I'm not sure the group would accept a proposal that's above ground in the area.
I can't speak for the group, of which I am not a part.
I oppose the above-ground proposal here; for reasons to do with line capacity and LSE corridor capacity primarily; and secondarily, I'm not unsympathetic on some of the community impacts.
The cost to go underground in the Leslieville section, according to Mx is 800M; whether their numbers deserve to be taken at face value is a separate discussion.
But that represents well less than 10% of project cost; and I think represents good value for money.
If the LSE corridor ends up requiring a 7th track later, that would almost certainly make the overground alignment more expensive than the underground one.
Should the O/L end up with inadequate capacity; addressing that would be enormously expensive. (I feel this is likely based on my review of Mx's own numbers)
I think some of the people pushing for this proposal and the additional station would fight against increased density.
A perfectly reasonable assumption.
I would disagree with such people.
I really, really, really dislike TO Planning and Heritage's block designation of buildings as heritage, especially along subway lines or potential stations. I think it's a way to make it cost-prohibitive to densify along subway lines, and also densify parts of the yellowbelt.
I'm a bit more nuanced on this.
First, I think we need to differentiate between the Heritage Conservation District designation, vs designating individual properties.
I disagree with some of the mass listing/designation we saw of buildings last year, which many of us would see as improper.
The challenge is, I expect, this is a response to heavy-handed moves by the province that push high-density/any form development; some of which really is quite awful.
Density good, sure; but its not wrong to ask for a thoughtful podium, granularity, preservation of main street retail character, transitions to SFH areas such that someone doesn't have a 10-storey streetwall directly overlooking their backyard.
TO Planning has been insufficiently ambitious on upzoning. Period. Full-stop. That is a big part of the problem. Though, I have sympathy for staff who don't want to propose something Council will shoot down.
But where the provincial response is a bit slap-dash, and doesn't provide a good tool-set to manage necessary growth...........
I understand (but disagree with) using the heritage listings as leverage to secure better development.
It shouldn't be done this way; many parties are to blame.
Overall, we still have many wonderful buildings in this City that merit historical designation, but lack it; even as we award it to properties that do not merit it.
HCDs have their own problems, but in general, don't imperil development on main streets if you can make it 'appear' to fit in.
I don't think that's a terrible goal; so long as it doesn't unduly impair density.
But the designation and the details as to how it is applied are both problematic.