Re: Bloor Street Revitalization
From the Post:
New Bloor: nicer to walk, harder to park
Plan revealed today
Peter Kuitenbrouwer, National Post
Published: Wednesday, May 24, 2006
Mayor David Miller is set to announce today a plan to finally make Bloor Street -- which boosters call Canada's premier shopping strip -- a nice place for a stroll.
"We have great stores and a horrible street," said Bob Saunderson, a commercial real estate broker who has spent eight years putting together a plan to fix up the strip. "It will become somewhere you can be proud of, to take some friends or visitors."
Under the plan, designers have taken away 53 parking spaces on Bloor, between Church Street and University Avenue. This will allow them to widen the sidewalks by about 1.25 metres on either side. The new sidewalks, made of coloured granite, will boast "hundreds" of tall, stately London plane trees.
Many saplings that the city plants die because the city does not water them; this plan calls for an underground irrigation system.
"If you can water these darn things, we will have a city full of trees," enthused Mr. Saunderson, the former chairman of the 500-member Bloor-Yorkville Business Improvement Area.
Tulips in spring, geraniums in summer, ornamental kale in fall and globe cedars in winter will accompany the trees in flower beds.
Brown + Storey Architects, who reworked St. George Street through the University of Toronto campus and also designed Yonge-Dundas Square, are the designers of the Bloor Street Transformation Project.
Explaining the plan three years ago, Kim Storey said, "You slow the pedestrian down, so it's a stroll."
At that time, the merchants had pledged $10-million and the city $10-million, and the group had asked Ottawa and Queen's Park for another $10-million. The upper tiers of government balked. The Mayor will explain today how the city will proceed without that financial help.
Yesterday, Ms. Storey said little. "It's good news I think. I don't want to steal anybody's thunder for tomorrow."
Mr. Saunderson said planners are contemplating spending more than $1-million for art to adorn the street, which has been modelled on North Michigan Avenue in Chicago, trumpeted by its boosters as "The Magnificient Mile." In Chicago, according to the BIA, a $36-million public investment resulted in a 33% growth in retail square footage.
The boosters note that New York spent $300-million in public money refurbishing Times Square, which led to $2.5-billion in private investment.
The timing is right, Mr. Saunderson noted: the Royal Ontario Museum, Royal Conservatory of Music and Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art, at the west edge of the Bloor strip, are all in transformation. "Our street will be the red carpet to the ROM," he said.
The strip boasts the country's densest cluster of high-end retailers, including Hermes, Chanel, Prada and Holt Renfrew. On average, the stores bring in $1,000 per year per square foot, compared with about $600 per square foot at the Yorkdale Mall, Mr. Saunderson said.
pkuitenbrouwer@nationalpost.com
© National Post 2006
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