I agree. It makes a whole lot of common sense to build condo towers atop existing malls. If traditional malls are dying, adding hundreds of residents should revive them.Would I be wrong to suggest the city expedite and incentivize these mall projects in whichever way possible? Especially Eglinton Square? They already have potential to become villages with strong community and I’m kinda desperate to see this proven out. I’m irritated this was never considered with Warden Woods,
But you say, hey, we’re gonna bunch a couple of 20 storey towers around this mall that has a Metro, a library, and LCBO, a dollarama and a food court. And by the time we’re built, the revitalized mall could have so much more… there’s your 15min city, your retirement community. With the crosstown to the subway, you’ve got a way different market.
I agree. It makes a whole lot of common sense to build condo towers atop existing malls. If traditional malls are dying, adding hundreds of residents should revive them.
We live in a strange world. To me, a condo community built atop a mall that already has (or could easily get) every amenity one could want or need in one place is logical. Most malls are on the decline, yet "luxe" malls like Yorkdale are busier than ever.They are trying this in Pickering by demolishing parts of the Pickering Town Centre.
The idea is to turn it into a planned community by tearing down and replacing little used sections. The mall itself is dying in favor of Scarborough Town Centre, Markville and Oshawa Centre and no amount of condos will fix it.