EnviroTO
Senior Member
So then you'd agree that the buldozers once done with the island airport should continue on to the island houses and take those down as well? Certainly having people living on the island does nothing to contribute to the 'Park' that we envision the islands to be.
That would be a good plan.
Maybe those bulldozers should continue north to Yonge and Bay knocking over the Rogers Centre, CN Tower, First Canadian Place, Scotia tower and the TD Centre right?
I don't think those are as much of an obstacle to having a great park.
We have a choice...
a) One of the greatest waterfronts.
b) One of the greatest airports.
or c) A mediocre airport and a mediocre park.
If you put Central Park next to an airport it wouldn't be one of the world's best parks. If you jam Singapore Changi airport onto a property the size of Toronto City Centre Airport and made the only access to it a couple of two lane residential roads it wouldn't be one of the world's best airports. We can aim to have one of the greatest waterfronts, we can aim to have one of the greatest airports, or we can aim for mediocrity. Greatness will be heard about in other places, mediocrity will not. However mediocrity is cheaper, requires less effort, and best of all we are already there.
Toronto City Centre Airport with its current constraints will quickly become congested and with little competition and little room for expansion the prices will rise and tickets will be ever harder to find. To allow it to continue to appeal to the average Torontonian we would need to allow it to expand it's footprint or it would eventually price itself to the high end of the market.
A public waterfront park by comparison would always be affordable and accessible to the average Torontonian.