adma
Superstar
And there's also the matter of sidewalk aesthetics, as those who are distressed by Toronto's utility-cut epidemic will tell you.
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I'm just not sure I understand your logic. I've tripped up several times on Toronto's broken sidewalks, almost twisting an ankle.
Let's see how Bloor Street fares over time. It is expensive, to be sure, but superior in looks and quality.
Another good example of a bad landlord contributing to Yonge Streets shabbiness. The building is for sale btw and the price is just under $5 million.
Much of this blight on Yonge Street is due to the fact that Yonge is pedestrian unfriendly. These king of buildings would not even exist if Yonge was to become a true shopping and restaurant mecca that it has the possibility of becoming.
Yonge is an ugly strip with planning based strictly on waiting for condo developers. There would be a restaurant or bar at this location if it was a desireable street to have it on but it's not. People's views on what a restaurant avenue should be has changed greatly over the years. 40 years ago a restaurant was someone you went to have a meal in a closed off restaurant and then go home, cafes and patios were non-exsistent. That has of course changed but Yonge Street hasn't.
When I am on Granville in Vancouver I see all the pedestrian traffic that wasn't there before. Wide sidewalks and cafes and bistros taking over the spaces once held by pawn shops, fast food joints, and porn theatres. Granville has become a walkers paradise. Then I look at Yonge with no restaurants, thin little sidewalks, cheap stores, ugly buildings, and a run down streetscape.
Yonge is probably the only street in the entire city where you can't sit outside to enjoy a meal or even a coffee. This is made even more obscene that none of the street is used for transit as it has a subway right underneath the whole stretch. Yonge is surviving on it's name and nothing more which is why locals don't shop there and it's busy nature has far more to do with people get off the subway to go somewhere else than it does for people actually going to Yonge street to do as a destination in itself.
Yonge is a street that is strictly for cars and pedestrians are treated as more of an anoyence that anything else. Unfortunately this true of most of downtown Toronto where sidewalks are thin and the car is priority one. Toronto is a car city and until City Hall decides to make the city the transit and pedestrian mecca that it could be, that will continue.
Much of this blight on Yonge Street is due to the fact that Yonge is pedestrian unfriendly. These king of buildings would not even exist if Yonge was to become a true shopping and restaurant mecca that it has the possibility of becoming.
Yonge is an ugly strip with planning based strictly on waiting for condo developers. There would be a restaurant or bar at this location if it was a desireable street to have it on but it's not. People's views on what a restaurant avenue should be has changed greatly over the years. 40 years ago a restaurant was someone you went to have a meal in a closed off restaurant and then go home, cafes and patios were non-exsistent. That has of course changed but Yonge Street hasn't.
When I am on Granville in Vancouver I see all the pedestrian traffic that wasn't there before. Wide sidewalks and cafes and bistros taking over the spaces once held by pawn shops, fast food joints, and porn theatres. Granville has become a walkers paradise. Then I look at Yonge with no restaurants, thin little sidewalks, cheap stores, ugly buildings, and a run down streetscape.
Yonge is probably the only street in the entire city where you can't sit outside to enjoy a meal or even a coffee. This is made even more obscene that none of the street is used for transit as it has a subway right underneath the whole stretch. Yonge is surviving on it's name and nothing more which is why locals don't shop there and it's busy nature has far more to do with people get off the subway to go somewhere else than it does for people actually going to Yonge street to do as a destination in itself.
Yonge is a street that is strictly for cars and pedestrians are treated as more of an anoyence that anything else. Unfortunately this true of most of downtown Toronto where sidewalks are thin and the car is priority one. Toronto is a car city and until City Hall decides to make the city the transit and pedestrian mecca that it could be, that will continue.
A lot of the things you said here are way off the mark or just plain incorrect. There are tons of restaurants and interesting businesses along downtown Yonge, the street is constantly packed with pedestrians and activity, and there is a busy bus route that runs along the street in addition to the subway. Despite its shabby appearance along certain blocks, downtown Yonge is still brimming with life and activity in a way that few other streets in the city can even come close to, and over the last few years I've been noticing improvements along the street on a monthly basis. Car traffic isn't even that busy along downtown Yonge.
Yonge does have huge potential and that is the sad part. City Hall's urban planning design for Yonge seems to be little more than waiting for condo developments to buy all the ugly buildings. This it exactly what shouldn't happen. If it continues Yonge will lose it's character and become nothing more than a gaudy neon strip a la Asia and condo developments rarely allow any retailers that offer anything outside the mainstream. The last thing Toronto needs is for it's once main drag to become little more than an elongated CityPlace with all the banality it entails.
Yonge will never recover until the City decides that pedestrians should take priority over the cars.
As for Yonge having a bus route, big deal. Granville has a study stream of buses going down it.......7 different bus routes and buses going by literally every 30 seconds all day long but it works because the busiest stretch is bus-only and they did this by getting rid of the other lanes and doubling the width of the sidewalks. Granville is full of patios and cafes and there isn't one on Yonge from Bloor to Front.
As far as pedestrian only routes not being feasible in our cold climate and auto dependent cities, no one look an further than so-called auto haven Calgary with it's attractive and extremely vibrant pedestrian only Stephen Avenue Mall.
There would be a restaurant or bar at this location if it was a desireable street to have it on but it's not. People's views on what a restaurant avenue should be has changed greatly over the years. 40 years ago a restaurant was someone you went to have a meal in a closed off restaurant and then go home, cafes and patios were non-exsistent. That has of course changed but Yonge Street hasn't.
Except literally across the street from that building there's BarVolo - arguably the best bar in Toronto and wildly successful, too.
We all agree that the current state of Yonge is disgusting and unacceptable, but the reason why this building isn't in good condition has everything to do with a negligent vision-less excuse of a landlord, and little to do with its location.
+1
As much as I think Yonge Street's buildings are rundown due to incompetent landlords, there is some hidden charm to Yonge Street. The Gloucester Mews building is one of the prettiest buildings in the city, and also houses Brownstone Bistro and The Red Bench (both amazing). Like said above, BarVolo is also great and is one of my favorite bars in all of Toronto. Going north there are some great cafes along Yonge like 7 West and Cafe M, and along the stript awesome longtime local businesses like Cats Cradle. These are all quality businesses that Torontonians still go to, despite Yonge Street looking like a piece of trash.
Arguably a lot of them do really well BECAUSE of the Yonge Street location being right off the subway line and being a very central street. There is so much potential along Yonge, it kills me to see so many of these two storey buildings fall apart and house D-list retail.
I don't mind the condos going up along Yonge, they certainly are more aesthetically pleasing than whats currently there, although I do love a lot of the well maintained older buildings that give Yonge it's charm. Perhaps Five St. Joseph can set a good example for Yonge Street.