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Road Safety & Vision Zero Plan

A tractor trailer hauling gasoline slammed into a home in North York on Monday night.

No one was badly injured in the crash, firefighters say, but the house appears to have sustained considerable damage. The incident happened around 11:25 p.m. at a home on O'Connor Drive.

It's not clear what preceded the transport truck smashing into the residence. One person was home at the time, said Toronto Fire District Chief Stephan Powell. The driver had to be extricated from the truck. He suffered only minor cuts and abrasions, Powell said, while no one inside the house was hurt.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/truck-gas-tanker-oconnor-east-york-1.6303439
 
A tractor trailer hauling gasoline slammed into a home in North York on Monday night.

No one was badly injured in the crash, firefighters say, but the house appears to have sustained considerable damage. The incident happened around 11:25 p.m. at a home on O'Connor Drive.

It's not clear what preceded the transport truck smashing into the residence. One person was home at the time, said Toronto Fire District Chief Stephan Powell. The driver had to be extricated from the truck. He suffered only minor cuts and abrasions, Powell said, while no one inside the house was hurt.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/truck-gas-tanker-oconnor-east-york-1.6303439
Yikes! (O'Connor is East York, not North York)

Edit to add the original picture from the article to which I am making a comparison. Credit is included in the screenshot:

1641309596922.png

That is/was this house:

1641309339007.png


And.........oddly, I know.........but this would have been North York prior to amalgamation.

O'Connor changed from East York to North York at Bermondsey (eastward to Victoria Park)

Based on the picture in the article above, it looks like the garages were wiped out in the crash, along with that brick column between them.

Tough to tell, for certain, seeing as the truck is in the way, but it looks like the home may have lost a good chunk of its structural support.

Terrible as this is for all involved, it almost certainly could have been a good deal worse!
 
There's a public, virtual meeting tonight on re-designing the streets of Kensington Market.

A tremendous opportunity for greening, aesthetics, safety etc.

The web page is here: https://www.toronto.ca/community-pe...rastructure-projects/kensington-safe-streets/

The presentation slide deck is here: https://www.toronto.ca/wp-content/u...al-Public-Meeting-2021-10-28Accessibility.pdf

Options being looked at, from the above:

View attachment 358994

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Short, Online Survey, here: https://s.cotsurvey.chkmkt.com/kensingtonsafestreets

I dug up a couple of renders of the possible changes to Kensington Market's streetscape; which also happen to be scheduled in TO Inview for 2023

To my understanding, these are only conceptual and not necessarily what we will get:

1641316057664.png


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1641316101628.png


From: https://kensingtonmarket.to/initiatives/kensington-market-streetscaping-committee/


I, for one, really like the look of these and hope the actual project resembles them.
 
I dug up a couple of renders of the possible changes to Kensington Market's streetscape; which also happen to be scheduled in TO Inview for 2023

To my understanding, these are only conceptual and not necessarily what we will get:

View attachment 372933

View attachment 372934

View attachment 372937

From: https://kensingtonmarket.to/initiatives/kensington-market-streetscaping-committee/


I, for one, really like the look of these and hope the actual project resembles them.
Hydro wires up the air, standard suburban style streetlights, and still open to cars. This is is the perfect area for pedestrian only streets. The shared streets are an improvement but these streets should be fully pedestrianised where possible. Even Ottawa is ahead of Toronto in this area - the recently pedestrianized block of Nicholas Street looks great there.
 
A pedestrian has died after being struck by a driver in Scarborough on Thursday.

Toronto police say they were called to Lawrence Avenue East and Midland Avenue at approximately 7:42 p.m. When officers arrived, they located a pedestrian without vital signs.

Paramedics said the person was rushed to a trauma centre and was pronounced dead. Police say the driver of the vehicle fled the scene. No description has been released.

Motorists should expect road closures in the area for a few hours, police warn.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/pedestrian-dead-scarborough-hit-and-run-1.6306903
 

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