adamyyc
Active Member
Final Master Plan for Crescent Road has been posted to the City’s Engage webpage: https://engage.calgary.ca/crescentroad
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100% agree - the image above even foresees a business dude in khakis talking obliviously on a cell phone in the bike lane! Bikes in the bike lane, walking and taking phone calls on the gravel path!I like some of things in the plans for Crescent Road. Cutting down on the amount of parking will hopefully cutdown on the amount of dudes with their loud mufflers. I like the plans for landscaping between the multi-use path and the main walking path. Maybe I'm being selfish as a cyclist, but I would rather have seen the multi-use path used primarily as cyclists/scooter/skateboard pathway. Today it's mostly used for cyclists, but it gets crowded quickly if there are even a few pedestrians on it. When I'm there as a pedestrian, I prefer the main walkway anyway. Overall though, it looks good.
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Overall the Crescent Road Plan looks good - it's not revolutionary and could go a lot farther to reduce car access/parking, but will be a major upgrade and closer to what the area actually is - a regionally significant viewpoint that attracts many people to visit at all times of the year.I like some of things in the plans for Crescent Road. Cutting down on the amount of parking will hopefully cutdown on the amount of dudes with their loud mufflers. I like the plans for landscaping between the multi-use path and the main walking path. Maybe I'm being selfish as a cyclist, but I would rather have seen the multi-use path used primarily as cyclists/scooter/skateboard pathway. Today it's mostly used for cyclists, but it gets crowded quickly if there are even a few pedestrians on it. When I'm there as a pedestrian, I prefer the main walkway anyway. Overall though, it looks good.
Though I don't have any stats, I think there used to be much higher vehicle traffic in the pre-covid days. Adding the extra temp lane for pedestrians, and having intermittent road closures over the past two years seems to have toned the number of vehicles. Taking away some of the parking should tone it down even more, which will be nice.One thing in the city's report that surprised me is just how low traffic volumes actually are. Most people are accessing the area by foot or cycle already, at all times a year. I thought that might be the case but rarely do we see such specific local data to prove it. Here's the data they provided:
Right ?!Still, consequences would at least be some deterrent.
I look to the sad decline of my former home of Seattle once the city council discouraged law enforcement from chasing petty crime, open drug use and vandalism. I don't want Calgary, or anywhere for that matter, to mimic the failed policies of the west coast.
Everything written by him is a joke. A sign that the two outlets who publish his stuff (The Herald and CBC) have checked out, and are too lazy to find writers that have an interesting and relevant take. Of course their market is people in the 60-80 year old range who don't like change.Richard White, if you’re reading this, retire. You’ve aged out of saying anything interesting and you unapologetically reinforce the status quo, while simultaneously crowning yourself an “urban realist” and writing anyone who would like to improve from what the status quo is off as an “urban idealist”. Let me be the first to say, retire, you are unbelievably uninteresting, have no unique takes and your only audience left is senile or lives in Airdrie or Cranston.White: Calgary’s urban growth reflects reality
Every two years, Calgary developers apply to Calgary’s city council to get approval for the creation of new communities at the edge of the city based on the demand …calgaryherald.com
Sincerely yours,
“An Urban Idealist”
Not just Calgary falling more into line with the rest of Canada, but Canada falling in line with the rest of the world. The vast majority of the world rents and lives in multifamily. Calgarians and Canadians have been spoiled when it comes to owning SFHs, but that's not the way of the future.Today's article on rental demand, echoes many of the same ideas discussed on here for the past few years:
In Calgary, apartment building construction is booming as more Canadians embrace rentals
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/calgary-rental-apartment-construction-1.6648089
Apart from short-term interest rate/cost disruptions, I can't see any future where rentals don't continue to outpace ownership in Calgary. This is particularly true given our long-term deficit in rental supply compared to every other large Canadian city. More rentals will be good to see and an inevitable step to transitioning to a major city.
I was wondering about that - and perhaps counter-intuitively, more about what such a proposal says about your existing TOD supply. We can demonstrate that suburban apartment demand is real and ongoing with projects all over the place, but developers appear uninterested in developing existing TOD sites. Leads to two possible conclusions:Good post, and makes you wonder why The City would consider an application like Midtown, which would just pull apartrment demand away from our existing transit station areas.
I was wondering about that - and perhaps counter-intuitively, more about what such a proposal says about your existing TOD supply. We can demonstrate that suburban apartment demand is real and ongoing with projects all over the place, but developers appear uninterested in developing existing TOD sites. Leads to two possible conclusions:
I think Calgary has long been too focused on the best-in-class, multi-billion dollar, mega-TOD developments of Vancouver as the example of what TOD is. For that scale/type of development there probably is a lack of demand that is required to have prices high enough to pay for such places. This makes everyone think #1 is true, particularly for large, ambitious projects like Midtown that would take a very long time to complete in our market conditions.
- There is lack of demand for TOD itself
- There is lack of supply of TOD sites possible to develop
But #1 lack of demand can't be true in all contexts and scales - we see demand everywhere with all the many random apartments springing up in the inner city and inner burbs. We've added 25,000 people a year to the region, every year, for decades and plan to continue to do so for decades to come. Demand does exist for mid/high density apartments even in suburban locations - it's just not Vancouver-scaled nor being distributed to TOD areas.
Or is it?
We've actually seen substantial TOD developments in the past decades at stations like Sunnyside, Brentwood, Dalhousie - indeed pretty much every site within walking distance of a station on the NW and W lines is seeing apartment plans come together where the land use and lifecycle of properties allows. Of course, these projects are all piece-meal and uncoordinated resulting in pretty mixed outcomes on creating actual quality TOD communities. Brentwood's public realm is a major miss, for example, as it's just a pocket of density surrounded by nothing and parking lots.
I think the case can be made it's actually lack of quality TOD supply from terrible land use planning that's the issue - there's surprisingly very few redevelopment opportunities at the stations themselves, as almost everything within 200m of a station is publicly owned park-and-ride and/or highway infrastructure setbacks (NW, NE) or a CPR corridor (S). On the private land side, it's not much better - besides a few pockets, many stations have near-zero infill developments to intensify the single-family home R-1 zoned areas that dominated every quadrant from the 1970s-2000s.
Exploring this a bit, here's a summary of the NW line's land uses at a super high-level. The NW is where I would expect the most consistent apartment demand - house prices have remained relatively high for decades, it's largely built out, and it has the most major transit-supportive density of activity outside the core at U of C and SAIT. In theory, a reasonably good place for apartment investments:
Conclusion
- Sunnyside - actual, ongoing TOD success. Land uses allow for it and demand is steady. No overly wide roads or park-and-rides.
- SAIT - all institutional lands. No real redevelopment possible near the station, beyond the campus development itself.
- Lion's Park - those senior towers at the Northland Mall were built in the 2000s, but is otherwise locked into R-1 neighbourhood with no redevelop at any meaningful density.
- Banff Trail - has the restricted covenant issue and R-1 zoning walling the community off, plus motel village, Crowchild's canyon and McMahon's parking crater on the other side.
- University - has same issues of SAIT and Banff Trail combined - institutional use on one half and R-1 with covenants on the other.
- Brentwood - some success, but limited by an underutilized 1,000 stall surface lot combined with institutional uses and strip malls + two highway interchanges.
- Dalhousie - some success, no interchanges nearby and reasonably nice place. Best TOD sites are locked into a 1,000 stall park and ride site on the north side, and a major church parking lot to the south.
- Crowfoot - brutal. 1,000+ stalls of park-and-ride, highway interchanges, 1990s-era power centre all surrounded by R-1 zoning. Not a real chance for TOD short of the power centre being redeveloped.
- Tuscany - park-and-rides, some density. Too new to redeveloped, hill to the north, storm ponds and the nearby 1 km wide Stoney/Crowchild interchange limits future potential if demand ever did materialize
This is all surface level analysis to be sure - I haven't even mentioned parking policies yet in this rant - but to me it's pointing to more of a supply-side issue of lacking quality TOD sites able to be redeveloped, not lack of demand for TOD sites themselves. Plus, on the supply-side the city actually has control, there's limited demand-side options available. The trick has to be to coax existing demand to allocate more efficiently by un-breaking our anti-transit land uses and policies.
The Midtown proposal, to it's credit is an attempt to create new TOD supply - just a seemingly amateur one that proposes somewhat unrealistic Vancouver-scale density (at least in the short-term) so that the cost the cost of a new LRT station can be split to make the project worth it. If new LRT stations were $5M instead of $50 - 100M, I think we'd see less density proposed here.
I've always thought all the wasted parking on these sites are massive untapped residential potential. Just go down the red line south from 39 Ave station, every station has that potential:Not a real chance for TOD short of the power centre being redeveloped.