The proposal incorporates 24 townhouse blocks and two 15-storey buildings.
The development proposal for the subject site includes two 15-storey residential high-rise buildings fronting onto Interchange Way with 169.1 m2 of at-grade retail on the northeastern corner; one 9-storey mid-rise flanking the northeastern edge of the subject site along the proposed Millway Avenue extension (i.e. Street B); and 22 townhouse blocks consisting of stacked, backto-back, and traditional townhouse units on the remainder of the subject site. There is also a considerable amount of private and public open space being proposed throughout this development block, including two significant mid-block connections in the form of a north-south pedestrian spine as well as an east-west 15.0m wide pedestrian mews. In addition, a linear park is proposed east of the development block to improve broader neighbourhood connectivity from the southern portions of the VMC to the larger urban park system and transit facilities to the north.
Copy and pasted from anywhere along the fringes of the GTA. I was amazed on a recent roadtrip how many stacked townhomes, midrises are being built on the north end of Durham and Halton urban areas. They save on land but they have the same walled, discounted, single use planning of the low density subdivisions of the past. Is it really any better?
Copy and pasted from anywhere along the fringes of the GTA. I was amazed on a recent roadtrip how many stacked townhomes, midrises are being built on the north end of Durham and Halton urban areas. They save on land but they have the same walled, discounted, single use planning of the low density subdivisions of the past. Is it really any better?
I don't think that the problem has to do with the built form, but rather the enclosed, semi-private nature of the subdivision (note that in this proposal, there seems to be exactly three ways into the block). This promotes the arterialization of the public roads, and the internalization of any sort of streetlife that could have happened otherwise (people only walk to their cars).
I would say it's marginally better?
They partially make up for it by having the 2 15-story towers.
But the way this area is going I'm surprised they aren't lobbying to allow for the towers to be higher.