tapesonthefloor
New Member
But there were no abandoned houses or graffiti
You didn't visit East Baltimore, then. I drove through a few weeks ago and it hasn't changed much since the Riot of '68.
But there were no abandoned houses or graffiti
What's interesting to me tho is that with the exception of that piece of George St Toronto's "bad" areas are nowhere near as uninviting. Even Jane/Finch or Malvern aren't that bad. Regent Park and parts of south Parkdale have a bit of that urban decay feel, but we're redeveloping the former and the latter still has a thriving community in spite of the degraded condition of some buildings.
Direct comparisons are almost impossible. Toronto is a singing, playing, laughing paradise compared to most American urban centres, both because we've been in a vastly different sociopolitical atmosphere for centuries and because we've dodged about fifty bullets that American cities couldn't avoid. I wish Modernist architecture and planning could've been one of those dodged bullets as well, but I'll be content that we don't have a stifling ring of downtown freeways choking the downtown.
You wish we could have dodged the likes of City Hall, the CN Tower, and the T-D Centre? You might as well wish you lived in another city because that architecture has helped to define Toronto's greatness.
my apologies, i was playing around in streetview looking for what looked to be a bad part of town and that looked pretty bad.. i welcome someone showing me the worst part of the south side!
I used to travel to Baltimore all the time and rarely left the inner harbour until once i went to a company sponsored course a few miles outside of downtown.. i went through some neighbourhoods where buildings had burnt down like 7 years before and never been touched
It would be off-topic to pursue this, and since my personal tastes are generally indefensible I'm not going to outline them here. I will say, though, that trotting out the few icons of an era isn't going to convince me that for every NPS there isn't a Sheraton Centre glowering at it from across the street.
Ugh.
...Now eight houses on George Street stand derelict and abandoned, windows boarded up, litter scattered across fenced-in yards. In July, the city green lit plans to revive the homes as part of a redevelopment of the neighbouring men’s shelter. But some neighbours question if the plans will fix the area’s problems.
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Seven of the eight homes along the stretch of George Street between Gerrard and Dundas have been designated as heritage properties under the Ontario Heritage Act. The move was meant to give the city authority to enforce heritage property standards and maintenance, and refuse demolition. But the houses are all now in various states of disrepair.
In July, the city approved plans to redevelop Seaton House, including buying the eight derelict homes, because more real estate is needed to carry out the plans. “If the properties are not purchased at this time, secured and stabilized, the risk of losing them altogether through demolition by neglect is significant,” a report to city council read.
Negotiations over the properties are still ongoing, and details won’t be made public until they’re complete, Patricia Anderson, a manager with the city’s Shelter, Support & Housing Administration Division, said in an email.
Preserving the houses’ history through the redevelopment is crucial, said Kristyn Wong-Tam, councillor for the area.
“We will do everything we can to preserve the heritage.”
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The report approved by city council recommended that redevelopment include an emergency shelter with about 100 beds, a long-term care home with about 162 beds, community space where clients can access services, and possibly private development. A final proposal will be presented to council in 2015, and work won’t begin until at least 2017.
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For Wong-Tam, the redevelopment is an opportunity to revitalize a neighbourhood that hasn’t had a lot of good news in the past.