AlvinofDiaspar
Moderator
It's a real choice that people made. 15 years ago, $400,000 could buy you a house in the neighbourhood or a new house in a nice subdivision in Brampton far from any railway line or factory. A lot of people chose to live in the city because they liked the older neighbourhoods and wanted to be less car dependent. There were neighbourhoods further from railway lines, but they weren't as affordable. There weren't that many trains using this railway line back then.
If people move to the suburbs, it's not like the street will empty out given the city's issues with housing. People will rent the houses out as rooming houses or divide them into apartments. You won't have as many middle class owners invested in the neighbourhood, and it could decline. Neighbourhoods declined throughout North America when cities built expressways through the urban fabric in the 1960s. I don't have anything against low income people, but most low income neighbourhoods end up undesirable places to live.
I beg to differ on the premise that people will a) move out and b) the result will be diving the house into rooming houses and apartments. This ain't the 50s and 60s where urban living is an undesirable. And let me humour scenario b) for one second as unlikely as it maybe - if that is the case, you'd end up with an even higher density, and more housing availability for the lower income individuals - isn't that a good thing?
AoD