Chris R.
Senior Member
Probably not until the Design District is fully sold.I wonder when we'll see sales start here
Probably not until the Design District is fully sold.I wonder when we'll see sales start here
I wonder when we'll see sales start here
You have quite a bit of runway before that no-vast-expanses day comes...Part of me will one day miss the vast expanses of parking lots - it allowed you to sorta appreciate the buildings around you and the backs o them that would just otherwise never be focused on. When was the last time anyone noticed the textile factory building in that now almost completely built block by caroline?
I also wish google maps could rewind into the far past - like the movie "lucy" - I'd love to be able to move around in 1800s hamilton - lots of factories downtown back then.
Also very DIRTY back then - factories belching coal, unpaved dirt roads, horse refuse everywhere. The alienist netflix series is a great indicator of how hamilton was back then, and most cities back then.
Ironically Hamilton once had a runway - although I think it was farther east - airport was originally right in Hamilton itself - well what qualified for an "airport back then" a landing strip for small planes I suppose..You have quite a bit of runway before that no-vast-expanses day comes...
Only time will tell.. and yes location wise you are correct.Honestly, retail will come when there are enough residents to drive demand of all sorts of uses. There is enough existing vacant retail space to be filled up with shops of all sizes, and even some spaces that could be converted to more residential (I am looking at you Jackson Square, well at least a portion of it).
BTW I do believe the old Hamilton Airport was in the Roxborough Neighbourhood (east end near the bottom of the escarpment, odd choice for an airport location)
There should always be as much retail space as possible in my personal opinion. I'm currently in Europe and almost every single block has multiple retail units. This large supply keeps prices low and allows far more local businesses to thrive. I don't want Hamilton to turn into Toronto where too few retail spaces leads to the franchisification of commercial.Honestly, retail will come when there are enough residents to drive demand of all sorts of uses. There is enough existing vacant retail space to be filled up with shops of all sizes, and even some spaces that could be converted to more residential (I am looking at you Jackson Square, well at least a portion of it).
BTW I do believe the old Hamilton Airport was in the Roxborough Neighbourhood (east end near the bottom of the escarpment, odd choice for an airport location)
I want to see them more densely packed - I should be able to enter a store every dozen feet or so imo - the building they made across from the tivoli is a good example of that - emulating rowhousing type walkability.There should always be as much retail space as possible in my personal opinion. I'm currently in Europe and almost every single block has multiple retail units. This large supply keeps prices low and allows far more local businesses to thrive. I don't want Hamilton to turn into Toronto where too few retail spaces leads to the franchisification of commercial.