holographic plastic
Active Member
Yeah this doesn’t seem like a neighbourhood where NIMBY’s would be out in full force, considering there has already been so much development in the area.
Oh, no. People always forget that they are (usually) not the first people in their area and forget that when their building was built it affected those already there by the construction noise, the blocking of sunlight, the addition of 'more people' etc etc. NIMBYs are always present.Yeah this doesn’t seem like a neighbourhood where NIMBY’s would be out in full force, considering there has already been so much development in the area.
How high is each floor? If this is 60 storeys and yet towers over Ice and sun life towers. It’s also no more closer to the vantage point then any others.
they better use black or darker façade otherwise im gonna lose my sh!t.
Thank you for the warning, I will keep clear :->they better use black or darker façade otherwise im gonna lose my sh!t.
I'm not sure what the original concern was but a wrong committed years ago by the past builder doesn't give a new developer the right to wrong the current neighbours. Lose to the value, or enjoyment of a property should be carried by all parties involved. Of course not all complaints are considered valid. For example, Toronto has decided to protect parks and school yards from building shadows. Condo owners don't get their sunlight or views protected from new developments on the other hand. It's what the city/community has decided is fair. Of course the values of individuals, NIMBYs may not agree with the rights the community has afforded them, or a developer may feel entitled to more height because of some precedent they think is relevant. This is a vary nuanced, grey line. Please don't lump every person that complains into the same basket, NIMBY. Many NIMBYs raise valid issues and developers have built buildings that are much higher quality because of it. Think of it this way, these people volunteer their time to increase the quality of their neighbourhood, of course some do it for selfish reason but honestly most do it altruistic reasons. Go to a few of the community consult meetings for new developments and you'll find most people there live too far away to be directly impacted by shadowing, traffic or noise. They just want their community to be its best.Oh, no. People always forget that they are (usually) not the first people in their area and forget that when their building was built it affected those already there by the construction noise, the blocking of sunlight, the addition of 'more people' etc etc. NIMBYs are always present.
I'm not sure what the original concern was but a wrong committed years ago by the past builder doesn't give a new developer the right to wrong the current neighbours. Lose to the value, or enjoyment of a property should be carried by all parties involved. Of course not all complaints are considered valid. For example, Toronto has decided to protect parks and school yards from building shadows. Condo owners don't get their sunlight or views protected from new developments on the other hand. It's what the city/community has decided is fair. Of course the values of individuals, NIMBYs may not agree with the rights the community has afforded them, or a developer may feel entitled to more height because of some precedent they think is relevant. This is a vary nuanced, grey line. Please don't lump every person that complains into the same basket, NIMBY. Many NIMBYs raise valid issues and developers have built buildings that are much higher quality because of it. Think of it this way, these people volunteer their time to increase the quality of their neighbourhood, of course some do it for selfish reason but honestly most do it altruistic reasons. Go to a few of the community consult meetings for new developments and you'll find most people there live too far away to be directly impacted by shadowing, traffic or noise. They just want their community to be its best.
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