junctionist
Senior Member
You'd be surprised at how many people actually oppose buried utilities because of the inaccurate belief that overhead wires are more reliable.
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Chronno gonna chronnoWe’re 15 months away from celebrating this thread’s 20th anniversary with absolutely nothing to show for it.
even the before state looks a million times better than TorontoI was recently in Sydney, and man oh man could that place teach Toronto (and, frankly, almost every global city) about streetscapes and public space. The whole CBD, and increasingly the neighborhoods around it, are being progressively rebuilt along the same very attractive template: granite sidewalks, generous tree pits, buried utilities. The before and after is stark:
https://maps.app.goo.gl/PViA8Mhfbfjfc4qg6 (2021)
https://maps.app.goo.gl/9PirH9oLNZ2JinFf9 (2024)
It strikes me that one of the big strengths here is using a few common design elements and repeating them again and again in different locations. They aren't starting from scratch on every project, as seems to be the case in TO.
It's their European flair. Toronto just doesn't have it. Never did and never will. Blandness abounds here.We don't have to look as far as Sydney - Montreal kicks our ass on most things streetscape and pedestrianization. Feels like they're ten years ahead of us on updating their streets.
I disagree, if you look at old photos of the city it looked pretty gorgeous.It's their European flair. Toronto just doesn't have it. Never did and never will. Blandness abounds here.
It's their European flair. Toronto just doesn't have it. Never did and never will. Blandness abounds here.
We don't have to look as far as Sydney - Montreal kicks our ass on most things streetscape and pedestrianization. Feels like they're ten years ahead of us on updating their streets.
This will probably need to wait until after the Ford era, sadly.I totally agree. Toronto needs a 180 turn on it's urban realm. Yonge Street should be at the very top of the list but also Queen, King, John, Ossington, and Kensington. They should all have their sidewalks doubled in width and some parts completely pedestrianized. That's the shame of Toronto, it has so much more potential but it has a bunch of gutless and non-visionary councilors and Mayor who are more concerned about renaming streets then actually improving them.




