cant the city demand more from the architects and developers?
The City has some options.............
But it can't dictate aesthetics.
It's also not supposed to micromanage beyond enforcing very clear zoning/bylaw rules.
The City can cap the size of a given store; it's debatable whether the City could regulate formula retail, but it could try.
But requiring granularity of facade treatments, as one example, is probably not on under current rules; though staff could could certainly make clear that that would be viewed positively.
While the City can play mean, or try to extract aesthetic benefits under 'section 37' rules..........that's far from ideal.
It's also not a great use of Section 37/community benefits.
(think about the idea that you could purposefully propose an ugly building; then negotiate to make your building prettier as a public benefit)
It's also just not that practical on most developments.
In the end, the City is fairly reliant on developers to deliver good design.
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Provincial planning rules could be altered to give the City greater maneuvering room. But I have mixed views about that, as it turns planners into armchair architecture critics.......
Or, it leads to a City standard definition of good design, leading to a different form of problem.