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I appreciate the clarification; however the new jog in Dundas still seems regrettable.

An option WAS looked at to keep ALL the roads straight (Dundas, Kipling, Bloor) but it was dropped due to cost (tunneling Dundas I think it was) and because the tunnel involves grade separation so it takes up more space that could go toward development, IIRC.
 
This is great news - finally Etobicoke will be getting its own "downtown"!

As for a roundabout, the only way it would have been cool is if it wound up something like Piccadilly Circus in London, surrounded on all sides by a nice variety of dense buildings and uses, but you just know the city would have effed that up.
 
There isn't really a roundabout at Piccadilly Circus - there is a lot of highly channelized traffic - but I know what you're getting at anyway, at least I think it is the suggestion of a circle made by the encircling buildings. With our road system being such a grid in TO we have so little chance for squares like Piccadilly that it seems a shame not to take advance of the kink in the fabric afforded here by Dundas Street's wayward diagonal... but this area is so far from being a dense fun hip downish townish place that I'm hard pressed to imagine that kind of thing working here even if it weren't effed up by the City, as you put it!

Still, I'm impressed by lateral thinking it takes to even see something like that as a possibility here, so it makes me wonder if others with the power to shape cities might also see opportunities to animate the coming public realm that will result here as the courthouse, YMCA, and other buildings come into being...

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This combined with the Dundas realignment would have really improved the area. Let's hope the Dundas realignment actually happens.
 
Oh no. Does anyone know where i can find this article?

What are they going to put here, if anything. This can't continue to look like this.

It looks like marsh land......awful news.
 
Oh no. Does anyone know where i can find this article?

What are they going to put here, if anything. This can't continue to look like this.

It looks like marsh land......awful news.

Pretty obsious ... it's going to sit empty, probably for a long long time assuming the land is already owned by the city or province, eventually they'll probably build - hence why you likely won't see anything else on it.
 
Oh no. Does anyone know where i can find this article?

What are they going to put here, if anything. This can't continue to look like this.

It looks like marsh land......awful news.

Liberals kill new provincial courthouse

"The courthouse is an institutional use that would have lent some balance to the development in the area," Milczyn said. "Now when we got out to the market, no doubt we'll get full density put on the property. Rather than a 10-storey courthouse, the bylaw permits 25- to 30-storey buildings. I wouldn't be surprised if that's what we see on that portion of the site."

More...http://www.insidetoronto.com/news/local/article/973744--liberals-kill-new-provincial-courthouse

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...for-toronto-in-ontario-budget/article1962608/
 
Well at least the re-alignment is still going ahead - that's the most crucial part of all this. Bring on the generic condos I guess...
 
From http://www.insidetoronto.com/news/local/article/973744--liberals-kill-new-provincial-courthouse

Liberals kill new provincial courthouse
Ontario budget cancels $181-million Toronto West Courthouse seen as 'catalyst' for Westwood Theatre lands, Six Points area redevelopment

"(It's) going to affect our ability to find purchasers. It might affect the price we get for it." - Area Councillor Peter Milczyn on the Liberals' cancellation of the Toronto West Courthouse
The Ontario government's no new taxes, no program slashes post-recession pre-election budget carved its deepest cut in Etobicoke with cancellation of construction on the $181-million Toronto West Courthouse.

Approved by both the province and Toronto council, the courthouse had been seen as the ignition of a broader revitalization plan for the vacant, city-owned Westwood Theatre Lands at Bloor Street West and Kipling Avenue.

The Liberals' pullout from the deal means it won't be paying upfront infrastructure costs and site servicing on one-third of the six-hectare property. Also lost is the province-paid first phase of the Six Points reconfiguration of Dundas Street West.

Both will now be funded by the City of Toronto through the sale of the land.

"It's disappointing because it's another delay," area Councillor Peter Milczyn said Wednesday.

The dead deal likely means what will be built in its stead will be the full density permitted under the zoning bylaw, Milczyn forecasted.

"The courthouse is an institutional use that would have lent some balance to the development in the area," Milczyn said. "Now when we got out to the market, no doubt we'll get full density put on the property. Rather than a 10-storey courthouse, the bylaw permits 25- to 30-storey buildings. I wouldn't be surprised if that's what we see on that portion of the site."

Milczyn has long argued for mixed-use development on the lands, rather than strictly condominium builds.

"It's going to be harder to go out to the marketplace and say, 'we want office and major retail and condo.' The easiest thing for the marketplace to do is give us condos," Milczyn said. "That's going to affect our ability to find purchasers. It might affect the price we get for it. But the goal remains a true, mixed-use development."

Milczyn said he remains committed to seeing both an office component, as well as major retail, perhaps a sorely needed neighbourhood grocery store on the site in addition to the potential residential development that now seems certain.

Meanwhile, the YMCA of Greater Toronto remains in talks with the city to purchase a 0.8-hectare parcel of the property that fronts onto Kipling Avenue, Milczyn said.

Build Toronto will now shop the cancelled courthouse land and the remaining four-hectares on the site to potential developers.

"Certainly, we're exerting a lot of pressure on Build Toronto to start selling real estate and generating revenue for the city. This is one of the key sites," Milczyn said.
 

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