pman
Senior Member
That's not how one of the city's chief urban design specialists (and consultant to the city and Waterfront Toronto) is describing it... so is he a liar then? a spin doctor?
http://news.utoronto.ca/miltons-vel...nds-using-pan-amparapan-am-games-build-legacy
He describes the PanAms as the 'catalyst' (his word, not mine) that kick-started plans that had already been conceived of but had no funding, no timeline and no political will behind them. The games provided these. Why would you claim that he is deliberately trying to mislead the people of Toronto? He states that the olympics offer the same potential, i.e. to kick-start further existing plans for the Waterfront, the Portlands and transit... and in fact I quoted the Mayor of Barcelona earlier who describes just the same thing. Why would you deliberately ignore these people?
Look it is abundantly clear that the anti-games group here is focusing exclusively on the olympics-specific costs and willfully ignoring the benefits, other than trying to disprove intangibles. This is to miss half the picture. You cannot make an accurate assessment of anything by throwing on the blinkers and looking at half the equation only.... fortunately our city planners will not approach this with minds made up, it is their job to look objectively at the entire picture.
Pman, those inspiring works were built in an entirely different economic and socio-historic context. The last great era of public works building in Toronto was the post-war era which ended some 40-odd years ago. What have we done lately? Rather, what have we done lately that wasn't pushed through thanks to the PanAms? Not much, and certainly not 40 years worth of consistent ongoing infrastructure funding and development. Just what is going to change this?... and I'm asking sincerely, by the way. If I understood the rationale for the optimism that there is a better way I might buy into it.
Well, I've rarely been accused of optimism, Tewder. Actually I'm not optimistic about this city's ability to get anything right, and I'm not sure anything could change the situation. My concerns about the Olympics are:
1. They would simply give the clowns in Council the resources to make more really stupid infrastructure choices,
2. They would saddle us with sports infrastructure we would never use. In fact didn't London plan to tear down its Olympic stadium, and hasn't the Japanese government quashed plans to spend 2 billion on their stadium? And that in an urban area with a population around the same size as Canada's, and possibly even approaching Toronto in the coveted alpha-dog stakes? Too much money on stuff we don't need to get the stuff we do need (subject to point 1).
3. They would do nothing to address the fundamental problem of Toronto's long-term competitiveness.
So, I hear you, going along the same path, with a professional planning community screaming common sense into the void, and ending up with obscenities like the Scarborough subway doesn't have much appeal. However, there's some hope for change. The Wynne government seems pro-transit, and a federal NDP win might cure her of her terror of Ford Nation. It's entirely possible Mulcair will win, in which case I suspect politics would wed policy and the fruits of their happy Union might be DRL. Even Tory and Council wouldn't look that gift horse in the mouth.
As for our competitive advantage, nobody in this town is serious about discussing it, beyond chanting "We're number one!" No we aren't. But a frenzied push to 2024 isn't going to do anything about that. Just ask Athens.
From a long history of past posts, I think we generally agree about Toronto's deficits. If I could be convinced that hosting the Games would fund useful transit supported by professional planners, i.e. DRL, and that it wouldn't be a financial disaster for the City with 100% certainty (meaning the City does not pick up cost overruns and does not pay for the sports infrastructure), then I could get on the bandwagon. But I sincerely doubt these conditions would be met.