superelevation
Active Member
Its funny how there was little talk about First Parliament until the land (car dealerships in large part) was needed for a transit project by a Conservative Government. I am sure if they weren't talking about all the TOD etc. the story would be that "Government wastes prime transit accessible land in housing crisis"That would not stop Metrolinx from expropriating it - as they want to do with the First Parliament site at Front @ Parliament.
Why? We need transit desperately and we need housing, I just don't think this should be our number 1 priority especially heading out of Covid, given how little anyone seems to have heard of it until it suddenly became important . . .Why won't the Province of Ontario do something special for Ontario's first parliament site? Can it be more than another non-descript parkette, station entrance, and community centre/library? Can one or more of those buildings be an architectural replica of the first parliament?
This isn't a terrible idea, but we also do need way more TODI hear you and I almost always agree with the inauthentic argument, but Toronto has a monoculture of steel and glass towers. 20,000 buildings have been demolished in the name of progress in the old city. A period piece would enhance the Distillery District as a destination. I'm sure it could have the usual coterie of towers behind it. I'm thinking of the Grange AGO here. One period building with a pretty square in front of it would be a nice terminus to the Esplanade. It could be the library or serve some other civic purpose and have an archival interpretive section showcasing artifacts and York's early history. Towers and vertical sprawl will further dominate the area. One architectural gesture wouldn't hurt. Our historic precincts are so small. We're building too many future St. Jamestowns.
Sure, but it shouldn't be at the expense of a transit line we have needed for half a century coming anyI disagree. We have drawings showing what they looked like. They had a modest but attractive design. The lack of public memory is the result of a failure to commemorate the history of the site. That shouldn't be used as a justification not to rebuild the buildings. They would make for a great cultural centre/museum, including a library.
Adding a new underground station and lots of tunnel, does not seem likely in the least. . . .This is absurd.
Why should they have to guarantee this when not even the government can?
I give them credit for proposing an alternate solution...one that seems well thought out and well within the realm of possibility.
Theres a rail corridor older than Canada here, theres gonna be trains. EG West should be elevated, but a bad project there doesn't make this a bad projectRight. The 60s urban sprawl in Leslieville. Completely unacceptable.
Unless you live on Eglinton West, Scarborough, Markham, Richmond Hill, etc.
Why was it affordable?The irony being that the government is planning to tunnel deep in the distant suburbs lol, even go so far as to tunnel to extemities below rivers. No posts about that eh.
Anyway this Munro alignment is dang near identical to the two iterations of the 1985 "DRL", which in itself was already an affordable subway.