News   Jul 15, 2024
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Planned Sprawl in the GTA

That has nothing to do with it.

The fact that the 50s (mostly) saw an explosion of wasting land because everyone and their mum came to expect SFH ownership (and whatever other misguided reasons) has nothing to do with the city's age.

Or it does, I guess, because the age during which most of the growth started or took place determines the social and development norms of the time, but the age of the city sure as hell isn't a valid excuse for it.

As you helpfully pointed out yourself, it does matter because Paris mostly grew when people rode horses, lived in walled cities and died of the plague at 40. Most of Toronto's growth took place during the explosive growth of auto-oriented, single-family-housing development. The 905 has all that context PLUS the federal government backing away from rental housing subsidies, a shift to condos etc.
Hence, the age is completely material in that it tells you when the city was born and that tells you an awful lot about how it grew. London had subways in the 1890s but they sure would have looked silly here around that time.

So too, the shape of a community which is only starting development in 2019 will also be determined by the context of the era in which it develops.
That's not to say you can't develop a compact, transit-oriented community today which achieves Paris/London-style densities, but that still relates to its age and how things are today.
 
The secret small-town urbanism of TV Christmas movies

See link.

At first glance, the made-for-TV Christmas movies that have come to dominate the holiday season on certain channels – and recently, Netflix – are profoundly anti-urban. They usually feature a woman – or more rarely a man – from the big city who for some reason has to go to a small town for the Christmas season. There, the protagonist discovers that the town embodies the true spirit of Christmas, and invariably meets a romantic partner who persuades the heroine/hero to abandon the urban lifestyle and settle down in this small-town idyll.

The big city is generally portrayed as alienating, materialistic and careerist – everything contrary to the “Christmas spirit.” The fact that the main character is being sent away to work during Christmas is itself symptomatic of this lack of spirit. Often there is a boss and/or existing romantic partner who embodies these negative big-city values and calls regularly, reminding the main character about the stress associated with living and working in the metropolis. The brief establishing shots of that city inevitably involve heavy traffic, the blank glass walls of tall buildings, and soulless corporate interiors.

All this urban negativity is contrasted with the friendliness, strong social ties, slower pace, and rather overwhelming Christmas decorations of the small town. It’s just flowing with the kind of social capital whose passing the sociologist Robert Putnam lamented in Bowling Alone. The contrast feeds on the long-standing imagery of an amoral and atomizing metropolis versus the supposed authentic, transparent social interaction and traditional values of small towns, where people support each other. These movies are ultimately a conservative form of drama.

What’s fascinating, though, is that the appeal of the small town is, itself, strikingly urban. The towns portrayed in these Christmas movies possess the walkability, active public spaces, and low motor vehicle presence that urbanists strive for. They have thriving, walkable main streets full of independent retail shops tightly packed together. Every building faces on to the street, and everyone strolls along the sidewalks and interacts with each other in person. There is always a car-free public square at the centre of town that is the focus of attention and the site of a Christmas festival of some kind, like lighting a Christmas tree, that brings the whole community together. And everyone is always crossing the street safely mid-block despite not looking both ways, because vehicle traffic is always somehow limited and slow. These movies know that speeding cars would ruin the atmosphere they’re trying to create.

Watching a Christmas movie is like the scene in Back to the Future where Marty McFly lands in his town in the 1950s and discovers that the town square, neglected and abandoned in his own time, is suddenly kept up, active and surrounded by bustling stores. It’s also reminiscent of the town of Stars Hollow in the TV show Gilmore Girls (whose spunky female leads and small-town vibe surely make it a relative of the Christmas TV movie), whose action is also focused around a town centre where all the characters bump into each other regularly, and where everyone constantly crosses the street safely without looking. No town in a Christmas movie has a Walmart on the outskirts that has sucked all the life out of its main street, a six-lane fast-moving “stroad” lined with strip malls, or cookie-cutter subdivisions that have drawn all the residents out of the older parts of town.

It’s a vision of the kind of small-town urbanism championed by the organization Strong Towns, which promotes relatively dense residential neighbourhoods around a vibrant downtown main street full of independent stores and services, with attractive and well-used public spaces that bring residents together in person. This vision both looks to the way towns developed in the past before motor vehicles became dominant – a sense of nostalgia shared by Christmas movies – but also to a future for small towns that is economically, socially, and environmentally sustainable.

As my Spacing colleague Glyn Bowerman recently noted, this underlying appeal of small-town urbanism is often reflected in plots that deal with the minutiae of municipal management. After all, becoming interested in city politics is a first step on the road towards becoming a full-blown urbanist.

Development plans, town budgets, the survival of independent small businesses, the activation of public spaces, heritage preservation, and the health of civic traditions all feature frequently. The mayor is often a significant character, trying to sort out some kind of civic issue that forms part of the plot that brings the romantic leads together. It’s as if these movies are subliminally sneaking municipal politics into the viewer’s subconscious, sugar-coated with a heavy dose of Christmas spirit.

My first experience of a holiday season made-for-TV movie, in fact, was flipping channels a few years ago and coming in part way through a movie featuring Jennie Garth (of Beverly Hills 90210 fame) in the midst of a discussion about urban planning. Startled to see urban planning as a movie plot driver, I kept watching. It turns out it was a fairly early example of a holiday movie (technically a Thanksgiving movie), Holidaze (2013). Garth plays a big-city career woman who works for a big-box retailer and gets sent back to her small hometown to persuade the local council to accept one of her company’s developments. (The town is called Streetsville, and although set in Illinois it was actually filmed in Streetsville in Mississauga – a traditional small town now engulfed in a massive suburb).

The townsfolk – including her café-owning mother and B&B-owning ex-boyfriend – are opposed, believing it will ruin the vibrancy of their community and its independent businesses. Garth’s character then gets knocked out in a fall and wakes up thinking she’s lived an alternative life where she settled in her small town with her ex. She ends up using her planning experience to fight the development proposal instead. It’s like a Strong Towns blog post come to life as a drama. As an early example, the plot is both more convoluted and more explicit about its municipal politics than most more recent Christmas movies, but the basic template and underlying urban issues are still often present.

The popularity of the world created by Christmas made-for-TV movies suggests that many people who don’t think they love metropolitan life still want to live in walkable communities where they can stroll along bustling main streets to buy things from locally-owned stores, cross paths with their neighbours at work and at leisure, and congregate together in public spaces for civic activities. They long for that world and live it vicariously through these movies, but don’t really know how to achieve it in a society that is so structured around the car, and that has largely lost the memory of how to develop new communities that are truly integrated, or expand existing communities in a sustainable way. We know what we want, when it comes to how our towns and neighbourhoods work, but we’re still figuring out how to achieve it consistently in real life rather than on the set of an imaginary drama made for television.
 
A scene in the iconic Christmas film, A Christmas Story, in which the main character's family eats Peking Duck on Christmas Day, was filmed in Toronto's East Chinatown. A few other scenes were filmed in other parts of Toronto.

A bunch of it was filmed here, and some of it in Cleveland.

 

"What’s fascinating, though, is that the appeal of the small town is, itself, strikingly urban. The towns portrayed in these Christmas movies possess the walkability, active public spaces, and low motor vehicle presence that urbanists strive for. They have thriving, walkable main streets full of independent retail shops tightly packed together. Every building faces on to the street, and everyone strolls along the sidewalks and interacts with each other in person. There is always a car-free public square at the centre of town that is the focus of attention and the site of a Christmas festival of some kind, like lighting a Christmas tree, that brings the whole community together. And everyone is always crossing the street safely mid-block despite not looking both ways, because vehicle traffic is always somehow limited and slow. These movies know that speeding cars would ruin the atmosphere they’re trying to create."

That's the "ideal" of a "Christmas" town or a "good old home town". Not the sprawling auto-oriented subdivision.
 
"What’s fascinating, though, is that the appeal of the small town is, itself, strikingly urban. The towns portrayed in these Christmas movies possess the walkability, active public spaces, and low motor vehicle presence that urbanists strive for. They have thriving, walkable main streets full of independent retail shops tightly packed together. Every building faces on to the street, and everyone strolls along the sidewalks and interacts with each other in person. There is always a car-free public square at the centre of town that is the focus of attention and the site of a Christmas festival of some kind, like lighting a Christmas tree, that brings the whole community together. And everyone is always crossing the street safely mid-block despite not looking both ways, because vehicle traffic is always somehow limited and slow. These movies know that speeding cars would ruin the atmosphere they’re trying to create."

That's the "ideal" of a "Christmas" town or a "good old home town". Not the sprawling auto-oriented subdivision.

Sadly it's just in the movies, and not in real life. Imagine if those small towns up north really did have something like that. Some do, some don't, but what stands out here is that, "Christmas towns" are something we see mostly in movies and not in life.
 
Sadly it's just in the movies, and not in real life. Imagine if those small towns up north really did have something like that. Some do, some don't, but what stands out here is that, "Christmas towns" are something we see mostly in movies and not in life.
There are lots of towns in Ontario that have fairly active cores. Just not so much in the US.

Port Hope, Cobourg, Burlington, Huntsville, Barrie, etc. all have relatively busy cores that actually serve important functions in the cities they are in.
 
Brockville and Goderich (moreso before the tornado) andperhaps Gananoque, in my view three of the prettiest towns in Ontario, have very walkable cores. No doubt, big-box-land has occupied the outer fringes.
 
Brockville and Goderich (moreso before the tornado) andperhaps Gananoque, in my view three of the prettiest towns in Ontario, have very walkable cores. No doubt, big-box-land has occupied the outer fringes.

I know all about Goderich but have never been to Brockville or Gananoque.....which, come to think of it feels weird. Might do a St Lawrence winter trip, yup.

Midland, Penetanguishene, St Marys, Owen Sound, Paris, Bobcaygeon are some other legit ones.

Ontario actually has a lot of quite nice small towns, unlike anything west of Kenora. Has to do with the age of the places...which comes right back to the point brought up above.
 
I know all about Goderich but have never been to Brockville or Gananoque.....which, come to think of it feels weird. Might do a St Lawrence winter trip, yup.

Midland, Penetanguishene, St Marys, Owen Sound, Paris, Bobcaygeon are some other legit ones.

Ontario actually has a lot of quite nice small towns, unlike anything west of Kenora. Has to do with the age of the places...which comes right back to the point brought up above.

Better in the summer if work/lifestyle permits. I imagine the waterfronts are pretty bleak and uninviting this time of year and most amenities would be closed. Brockville refurbished their downtown railway tunnel (oldest in Canada apparently) as a tourist attraction. It's about 1/2 km long and the geology and 1850s construction is interesting if you are into such things. Alas, closed until Spring.
 
I imagine the waterfronts are pretty bleak and uninviting this time of year and most amenities would be closed.
Some of the most exciting and inviting waterfronts are the frozen ones. Winter is beautiful.

Brockville refurbished their downtown railway tunnel (oldest in Canada apparently) as a tourist attraction. It's about 1/2 km long and the geology and 1850s construction is interesting if you are into such things. Alas, closed until Spring.

Bastards. Guess I should keep that for a summer ting.

I really should do a summer adventure alond the St Lawrence. Fuck me, it's been a while.
 
Some of the most exciting and inviting waterfronts are the frozen ones. Winter is beautiful.



Bastards. Guess I should keep that for a summer ting.

I really should do a summer adventure alond the St Lawrence. Fuck me, it's been a while.

There is a fair bit of natural groundwater leakage so I imagine icing is a concern, along with fewer tourists. I find the eastern Lake Ontario shoreline communties as well as up along the Rideau Canal corridor to be quite interesting. I like the old limestone architecture.
 

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