When I see this, I see "student housing". This is how I lived as a student...
Yea, for a few student's or something this would probably work. I think most people will find students and families don't always have the same tastes, though.
Second_in_pie said:
Yeah, it's definitely possible to live with a family in a small space. The problem is that people expect to go to these places with a suburban mindset; stay at home and only go outside to get groceries or go to work/school. If you don't stay to the house and outside to have fun by yourself or with kids, people might find that it's not actually that bad. You might have to keep a relatively cramped dining room + living room layout, but aside from that there's actually plenty of room.
It's not a suburban mindset, it's just practicality. What, exactly, are you going to take your seven year old to do on a daily basis in clubland? The entire downtown is designed, logically in my opinion, around young, childless professionals with high disposable incomes. Unless you are Gordon Gecko rich you can't eat out frequently downtown without bankrupting yourself or having your spawn grow up on discount falafels, so dining is more or less out. Clubs/bars are obviously out. Shopping is out. Museums could work, but you can't realistically go them more than once or twice a month. With a few exceptions, downtown parks are awful. You can't even realistically let a kid (under 10) out on their own to just walk around, so one parent would have to take it for a walk like some kind of dog. And isn't that what every parent wants? To get home from a day of work and have to walk their kids around some yuppie bar so that their eyes can focus on something more than 8 feet away? I'm sure siblings will love having to study in the living room while their mom cooks and the brother plays Nintendo.
EDIT: Frankly you wont find any city on Earth where children live in numbers close to the downtown core. Urban children, yea, sure. But not near the CBDs. Not in London, not in Paris, not in New York. It doesn't make sense there and it doesn't make sense here. People move close to these areas because they are close to work and recreational activities. Given that kids neither work nor have compatible recreational preferences with 28 year olds, neither of those apply. It's more practical then to move to areas like the Beaches or, if you could afford it, somewhere along the Yonge line like Summerhill or Davisville. That gives parents convenient access to work, while not paying for location benefits families don't want.