@AlexBozikovic was on Mike Moffat & Cara Stern's 'Missing Middle' podcast discussing the use and abuse of Heritage designations and how that impacts housing availability.
About 50% accurate and thoughtful; about 50% erroneous either in fact, or in that the vast majority of the population would disagree (on a subjective point).
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The statement that you can only build an apartment in 4% of Toronto is utter nonsense, seeing as EHON just allowed rental tenure and fourplexes as of right in all neighbourhoods.
What was true to some degree 2 years ago is no longer.
Though the 4% statement wasn't really correct even then.
Now if he meant high density, tall buildings that's a different question, but its still a lot more than 4% in practice.
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Alex's broad take that demolishing things people love is fine, its modernism that needs saving, because Alex loves history that other people hate.
Sorry, not a legitimate take. The reason you (should) save a building is limited to two things:
1) People like the way it looks
2) It contributes to the vibe of a community/street people love.
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Much of modernism is cold, simplistic, and dull. It shouldn't have been built in the first place and its removal will be welcome. By all means lets save some of the better examples, some Prii and the like. Even 350 Bloor would not really have been a loss, but I love the project because of HPs vision which adds variety to the skyline and is frankly more interesting than the extant structure.
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Heritage designation has not seriously impeded any downtown development that in the City that is the king of facadism. We continue to tear down 19thC history apace.
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Yes, the Danforth and Mt. Pleasant and Little Jamaica are all examples of the misuse of heritage designation. Zero question. But that, I would argue, is because of a lack of tools for the City to preserve the illusion of human scale at street level and so you grab the heaviest tool you have. What people care about on Danforth is brick, cornices, small storefront retail, a 3-storey streetwall, few care about a six or eight, or twelve storey building set behind same. But it requires a more empowered City, a more creative city and a more creative and less greedy development community to build that out.
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The suggestion that houses are off limits at Yonge/Eglinton is also nonsense, two dozen have been taken down and two dozen more (probably a lot more) have been assembled for development.