MisterF
Senior Member
It's right in the article.Planners sent 15,550 questionnaires to residents in the area bounded by Lake Ontario, the Don Valley, Bathurst St. and Dupont St.-Rosedale Valley Rd.
It's right in the article.Planners sent 15,550 questionnaires to residents in the area bounded by Lake Ontario, the Don Valley, Bathurst St. and Dupont St.-Rosedale Valley Rd.
I just noticed this - in the first paragraph it says downtown grew by 65% over 30 years and 10% in the last five. In the next paragraph it says it went from 102,000 to 169,000 (65%) in five years. So which is it?? 17,000 units over the last five years is definitely believable, but 67,000 people in five years seems high.The explosion of high-rise condominiums in Toronto's downtown isn't an illusion: The population of the downtown core has grown by 65 per cent in the past 30 years, and nearly 10 per cent in the past five.
That makes downtown Toronto one of the fastest growing communities in Greater Toronto, says a new report by the city's planning staff.
...
Still, downtown growth was dramatic: 17,000 housing units were built in the area between 2001 and 2006. The downtown population stood at nearly 169,000 last year, up from 102,000 five years earlier.
I don't know about that. I'm certainly not rich. True I bought our house in Cabbagetown in 1998, before the value rose dramatically, but that's just about playing the market.Downtown Toronto is becoming a playground for the Rich and the weller to do crowd.
however the crack epidemic peaked in the late 80's leading to many many murders...