MichaelZ
Active Member
Namely, the below circled neighborhoods seem incredibly close to such a large railway yard. Wouldn’t industrial/commercial land there have been much more valuable and also much more sensible?
And its not like there was a shortage of demand for such spaces since even areas quite far away from any rail line or highway were zoned as industrial/commercial. So I can’t see any reason why a normal suburban neighborhood would be approved and built, and marketed!, within throwing distance from the yard when large warehouses, factories, etc., are spread along all the way to Steeles, several km to the north.
There’s also a similarly weird neighborhood next to the railway yard in Vaughan, in what seems to be nearly the best possible industrial land, and nearly the worst possible residential land.
And its not like there was a shortage of demand for such spaces since even areas quite far away from any rail line or highway were zoned as industrial/commercial. So I can’t see any reason why a normal suburban neighborhood would be approved and built, and marketed!, within throwing distance from the yard when large warehouses, factories, etc., are spread along all the way to Steeles, several km to the north.
There’s also a similarly weird neighborhood next to the railway yard in Vaughan, in what seems to be nearly the best possible industrial land, and nearly the worst possible residential land.
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