Committee day for the latest EHON.
I will link to some of the comments I found interesting and hightlight/discuss some:
Up first is Sean Galbraith who I like quite a bit. I agree w/the bulk of his take which is supportive with caveats.
From the above:
Sean and I in complete agreement here:
He also has a good point #1 in which he notes that somehow the rules have ended up that a single townhome could be 13M tall on a major street, but a multiplex could only be 10M tall. That's weird and makes no sense.
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Now I want to bring forward a couple of points where Sean and I differ a bit:
I agree w/Sean that the way they've written this and w/o explicit mention of purpose is a bit problematic. But I'm going to assume staff wanted this in order to guarantee permeability (as opposed to hard surfaces) and sufficient soil volumes for trees.
The thing is, IF that's the purpose, it should say that, so that a planner could have discretion to vary for a development that meets the intention but not the letter of the rule. There will also be developments where this doesn't make sense.... we'll come back to that.
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I know what staff is trying to achieve here, and I submitted comments on this as well during the process. The problem here, to me is the uniformity. If most homes on suburban arterials are set back ~6M from the sidewalk, the desire of staff is that the new building should fit in, and not stand out like a sore thumb. And, if there is room for a row of trees in front of said houses, to maintain that. Got it.
I think this makes some sense in a mid-block area that no one thinks will support up to the sidewalk retail and buildings higher than 4s. There is logic environmentally and aesthetically to that choice.
But there are also lots of areas in the City that don't have a 6M setback right now. and/or are close to a major intersection and make sense to convert to a different style of development. The problem here is trying to actually make the as-of-right, uniform over too many different types of lots and too many different types of areas. I think it would have served staff to bite off smaller chunks here or take a bit longer to figure out the wording.
Of course, a developer will still be able to apply for ZBA or for Minor Variance to get around these rules where they are uniformly dumb.