kotsy
Senior Member
After all renovations are complete, the Bay course will act as a twin to the York concourse including a lower retail level.
After all renovations are complete, the Bay course will act as a twin to the York concourse including a lower retail level.
So, if I'm reading the diagram correctly, the ground level of Union, where the Great Hall is, is the same level where the York and the Bay Go concourses will be? In other words, the current Go concourse, which is on the Bay St. side one level down from the Great Hall, will itself be a lower-level retail above which the Bay St. Go concourse is?
No, the GO concourses are still a level below the Great Hall, more or less same level as the VIA concourse. In the end, the Bay concourse will same level as the subway/Path section while York will be a bit higher. You can still completely avoid the Great Hall which will remain mostly for VIA though there will be more connections to it and increased retail/food on either side.
Hmm, yeah. Points well taken. As long as the Great Hall gets more foot traffic by being integrated more into the flow of the station, I'll be happy. It needs to be used. It's great.
Having gone to Jays games over the years, it's been depressing to see the massive dead space of the Skywalk. I'm kind of excited that the UPX station and the shops etc. that come with it are revitalizing that area. More sustainable than baseball card shops, I guess.
Not sure how old you are and I apologize if this is just telling you something you already know....but when SkyWalk opened it was far from dead space....the entire south side was lined with retail (food outlets, etc)....it all died though. See in the early days of SkyWalk the crowds were too big and no one could actually stop at the retail as there was just this mass of humanity pushing people to SkyDome or Union (depending if you were pre or post game).
Now, kinda ironically, retail would not work because the crowds are so small.
Like you've said, it died when the novelty/popularity of SkyDome wore off soon after the early/mid-90s recession. Incidentally, given UP and the Station St. office development, it might see its' best days yet.
AoD
So from what I get from all that I have read on this thread and UT's article is that we are facing potentially 6mos.+ (between Pan Am games and 2016) of little to no food/retail in Union Station?