44 North
Senior Member
To the point someone made a couple pages ago about the Lake Shore actually being a worse pedestrian experience offender, I think that's right (though we're talking about two pretty awful offenders). I took some tourists in from Europe down to the waterfront from the CN Tower/roundhouse plaza area on the weekend. They loved what has been done with the waterfront/harbourfront, but were floored at just how difficult/unwelcoming the walk to the waterfront is ("oh, I didn't know Robert Moses also worked in Toronto" was a comment).
Given that a complete teardown of the Gardiner is both probably unfeasible in the next numerous generations and, perhaps more importantly, that it mightn't actually accomplish many of the goals advocates of a teardown seek, that got me thinking about alternatives, expressly with the goal of opening up the waterfront to pedestrian traffic.
The only semi-real alternatives my mind could muster were some sort of elevated pedestrian bridge experience (maybe one that's less traditional ped bridge and perhaps brings in some High Line-esque qualities to its design) on either York or somewhere slightly west thereof that would run over LS but under the Gardiner or, of course more ambitiously, a similar treatment that actually ran over the Gardiner at one of those same junctions. The latter conjured a proposal I recall from the Gardiner East debate.
And for a couple years when QQW was under construction it was doubly worse. To get from the CN Tower/Dome to Harbourfront and vice versa was a nasty nightmare, particularly in winter. When taking visitors around I'd always apologize on this city's behalf - something I find myself doing all too often.
Still, with regards to crossing under the Gardiner, I think some of the answers could be a lot simpler (and less expensive). Improved lighting, colour, landscaping...etc. It really is more unwelcoming than it should/could be. Some of this will be fixed over time as general maintenance, capital works, and the removal/improvement of offramps and onramps. However these are standard highway/roadway projects (i.e with little to no frills attached). What the City really needs is a cohesive plan to improve the entire area under the Gardiner ASAP. Not piecemeal frou frou projects in pockets here and there. Rather a quick and cost-effective way to enhance the colour, ambiance, and overall experience for the tens or 100s of thousands walking (and I guess driving) under it every day.
Interestingly though, one of the ideas being considered for the waterfront transit "Reset" is to convert the Bay streetcar tunnel into an underground pedestrian (automated) walkway. I don't really support that (and IMO it runs roughshod over Jane Jacobs' principles), but if we want to convey people across Lake Shore / Gardiner without having them experience the dank darkness of its underbelly, maybe putting them underground can also be an answer?