Woodbridge_Heights
Senior Member
^^^ I had a neighbour who would chop down the municipal tree planted by city workers in front of the house.
Absolutely. It's designed from the get-go to favour sprawl and personal autonomous motorized transport. Mass transit, as we've seen in Mississauga, often amounts to a late afterthought. Now Mississaga is slowly moving in the right direction. Still, finding the political will among the citizenry to pay for a comprehensive expanded transit infrastructure is a huge challenge, GTA-wide.
I'd have to disagree on that. most residential streets in nice neighbourhoods with good canopy have a tree spacing of about eleven paces. A friend of mine bought a house up in Aurora on Woodroof Cresecent, where all the houses were built in 2000. the way they planted the trees, which was densely, made it so that now, only 13 years later, it looks amazing, and the branches will be touching over the street in less than 10 yrs.
There are a couple instances in SE Oakville where estate sized lots were turned into little culs-de-sac subdivisions. Lakeview, Highland Park and Richvale/Yongehurst looks like they might have had the same happen, but I'm not aware of any examples of actually subdividing a city block with midblock through streets (as opposed to crescents and culs-de-sacs).Is there any precedent of filling in a tighter street grid into existing suburbs?
Ever occur to you to buy and plant your choice of tree?I had asked the City of Toronto for a free oak tree on the boulevard, ended up with a free dwarf maple. By dwarf, they mean very slow growing.
Is there any precedent of filling in a tighter street grid into existing suburbs?
Transportfan it looks like the trees in the first picture will do a good job of keeping the noise and dust of that busy thoroughfare (and I'm guessing the speed limit is between 60 and 80?) at bay. Does anyone want a home looking out onto nothing but bumper-to-bumper traffic in rush hour and 18 wheelers heading to the nearest big box centre the rest of the time?
Ever occur to you to buy and plant your choice of tree?
Gee, that's a lot of bother...Ever occur to you to buy and plant your choice of tree?
For a no charge tree?He pays property tax for a reason.