steveintoronto
Superstar
King Street has outgrown its sidewalks and downtown growth is just getting started. In the coming decade, the daytime population of downtown Toronto is going to double. Most of those people get around on foot so the King Street redesign must take pedestrians into account. The narrow sidewalks have to be expanded.
I agree with MetroMan on many points, but on this one we disagree. Whether you or I think otherwise, the priority of this mall is for transit. King is the fourth most used transit route in Toronto. THAT is what the emphasis is on, not pedestrians sauntering. There's lots of pedestrian space to build *above* the sidewalks and *over* the transit RoW, just as is done in Hong Kong and other cities.If true why are you so enthusiastic about wasting big parts of that precious space by handing it over to restaurant row for free?
Indeed. And the Relief Line is an excellent example of many of those same folks bemoaning the lack of a 'greater integrated vision' and yet are shuttered when it comes to putting the Relief Line into the regional and greater context it demands. Just ending it at Queen and University is madness, let alone building it as yet another subway boondoggle. The most expensive transit project ever planned for Toronto, and they foresee running four car subway trains on it? WTF? To talk the King Transit Mall and the Relief Line as completely unrelated systems and movements boggles the mind of a transit planner from almost anywhere but Toronto. And all the independent ones here are sounding the same alarm.Excellent point. This talk might be better in the subway thread but what happens there is intertwined with this. The very presence of the King concept looks like it helped deflect the subway to Queen yet both projects still look like they're being managed in their own silos as if one shouldn't have anything to do with the other.
In the event, I cannot foresee QP, no matter who gets elected, funding Toronto's Pape Avenue Entitlement with toy trains. Metrolinx, who the funding is going to be channeled through, is going to give priority to regional *run-through* RER relief on Union Station as well as the present subway. And that includes a one-seat ride from beyond the suburbs to the core of Toronto, just like *modern" world class cities. What a concept. Ironically, the Kompromized King Mall, which will flounder in it's own special Torontonese Sauce, will make that point clearer than ever: 'Why give Toronto money when they just spend it on toys'?
It's been clear all along. The question isn't if she was forced to buckle-under to retain her job, the question is really why quit now? Some stories have hinted at reasons, but I think something bigger is yet to reveal itself.A couple a months ago I said the now former Chief Planner was delivering a compromised transit scheme on King and compromised subway a few blocks north. Too soon to say I told you so?
I like Keesmaat, a lot, but did she compromise herself? Absolutely...was that justified? Hard to say. I respect her for quitting though. How long can you live a lie?
It's still a give-away, at least for those with 'location, location, etc'. It's a transit mall. Without that, there is no 'King Street'. If pedestrians are second in priority, then ban cars. As an avid cyclist (I just zoomed through there) I'm more than willing to give up King as a cycling thoroughfare. So should cars.As with all 'boulevard cafes' (which are on public property) the City charges businesses for the space (downtown ca $80 sq/m ) and these fees are likely to be increased quite substantially when the new Boulevard cafe by-law is approved later in the fall.
But the priority is, and will be, getting streetcars through there in a timely manner. A "Pedestrian Mall" in such a narrow street is incompatible with the prime objective.
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