gristle
Senior Member
"Cityplace is unilateral success"? It sucks at street level, but I guess that is an "elitist" remark.
This one needs more hard information before it can be discussed in full. One would not want to engage in an fallacies or untruths regarding the imminent erection of this unfertile project.
"Cityplace is unilateral success"? It sucks at street level, but I guess that is an "elitist" remark.
"Cityplace is unilateral success"? It sucks at street level, but I guess that is an "elitist" remark.
If you finished my sentence, I say in terms, of a future livable city, and sustaining growth, and services to the citys core... Density is a must , to survive this next century.
Street level will improve over time, as retail and cafes come in.... $$$ follows footsteps.. I am not saying every design aspect is flawless...
But my point is ... middle class urban density, is an unthinkable approach to city planning, here in the Auto driven US...
When all is said and done and the dust settles.... How many people will live here??
I will guarantee, it will be more bustling than any sprawling cul de sac of track housing in Outer Mississauga. These people will fill these parks and waterfront, walk to Rogers center... Drink along Bremner, eat along Bremner. Any increase to downtowns population is a plus. Especially when you consider that we are accepting all tiers of society into the mix.
In fact this will be a youthful and exciting place to live. Maybe not for retirees or familys of 8, but who does that anymore??
It seems every time I post, some one wants to argue with me??
I was trying to crack a phallic joke... Instead I am back defending myself. Its like 6th grade all over again.
The problem with the density argument is that all the condos in the world aren't enough to sustain a real, diverse urban retail street. Queen West, for example, has a catchment area of millions. Even tens of thousands of condo units won't support a small niche store. Moreover, local condo residents don't want diverse, unique stores--they understandably want things that they will use every day, like groceries and dry cleaners. That's why all these claims that a few hundred condo units will liven up the Distillery in Winter are absurd: these people aren't going to be buying high-end art and sound systems every day.
I wouldn't be quite so confident that condo retail will eventually evolve into something more interesting and attractive. While some might make themselves more open to adaptation and modification, others seem quite impervious to change. Look at the Bay and Wellesley area. Those condos have been around for 20 years, and the area's as bleak as ever.
^ What he said. I have become convinced that many of the people who post here are more than a little spoiled by the incredible bounty of new construction going on in Toronto. Every new project that comes along gets compared to the very best projects in the world, and when they fail to measure up to that impossibly high standard (as can be almost always expected in ANY city in the world, considering that most projects have to be affordable for ordinary buyers) they are derided as "just another boring box", even if they are far from box-like.
Yes, I agree that Toronto is much better than places like downtown Minneapolis. That's why I don't think we should compare ourselves to cities like that and why I don't think solutions like increased downtown residential, which might well be very beneficial in downtown Minneapolis, are relevant in Toronto where most of these problems have already been solved.
I live in New York, and many of the most interesting places in the city have among the lowest densities. The highest density areas are often comparatively deserted.
I'm not saying that density is inherently a bad thing. I'm just saying that it isn't a panacea.
any renders for this project or any news as to where they could put it where is their any space