marcus_a_j
Senior Member
So they are proposing to demolish two office buildings (7 and 9 storeys?) with zero office replacement?
So they are proposing to demolish two office buildings (7 and 9 storeys?) with zero office replacement?
The Home Depot complex is two buildings, the ESRI Canada Building is one. Losing both with no replacement is ridiculous.
With a two roads only in and out of here, traffic is going to be a mess. Not that I really care what happens to folks in their cars, just that mathematically, this is setting things up for disaster. Yes, yes, 'Crosstown', yes, yes, 'Ontario Line' - I'm skeptical that either of those will do anything to really lure folks out of cars in this part of the City in the foreseeable future.
You can bet there will be a frequent service Wynford bus serving that street and Concorde Place (carved off of existing routes that currently head to Line 1 and Line 2) as soon Line 5 opens. Not that it would solve all traffic issues related to this proposals… but do remember that buses exist, and that our dense, frequently served network of them is one of the reasons that Toronto's subway is so well patronized.I'm inclined to agree. This area (Concorde/Wynford) is quite isolated. Limited to Wynford to Don Mills and the same to Eglinton to go anywhere else.
Eglinton, as yet, is not an urban-feeling or walking street. Even if one were highly optimistic about achieving that on the lands west of DVP, this site is east of DVP.
The site is isolated from the next node to the east (Bermondsey) by the East Don Valley. It offers a single, small-scale grocer in immediate walking distance,
and the Loblaws (superstore), which is again, the other side of the DVP.
At 600m-800M from the Crosstown, this pushes the limit of the MTSA definition.
The distance to the O/L is a whopping 1.5km.
A parking ratio 0.42 spaces per unit certainly seems ambitious. (as in low relative to what I imagine demand would be.
It's a 10 minute walk to Eglinton (not unlike many streetcar 'suburbs' in the inner city). Also, there's an existing bus line that goes right on Concorde Pl. This area will be very well served by transit.Here we go again, over intensifying an area with only 2 entry/exits points. Where have we seen this story play out before .
I'm relatively young and all that, but I sure as hell wouldnt be walking to the LRT stop from Concorde Gate. Bus service will help alleviate pressures to an extent, but it wont solve the issues we're going to see here.
Exactly this.it's a 10 minute walk from a surface transit stop, and nothing else really other than a few neighbourhood retail units. Is that really the spot for 7,000 people to live (10,000+ once including the DVP Hotel redevelopment)?
I don't think people don't think there shouldn't be any density here, just that this development as proposed is actually one of the larger projects in the city for unit count and it's not exactly in an "excellent" location that you would expect for such a project. If any of those people want to do much of anything other than go to work on the LRT they are looking at getting in a car and driving, be it to access retail, groceries, community facilities, etc.
Scale this back to 1,500 units and we may be discussing a more appropriate project for the location if you ask me.