taal
Senior Member
Please let this finally start !
Montreal seems to push out 1-2 of these street rebuild projects every year, while Toronto has been sitting on the first major street revitalization since 2007. What gives? I can't imagine Montreal having substantially better finances than Toronto (in terms of tax base). Land values are much lower there. Toronto is in budget shortfall while Montreal has many pedestrian-oriented capital projects on the go. Is the city of Toronto just wildly inefficient in spending money compared to Montreal?
Thanks. But I am unclear as to why a repaving and decorative brick/streetlights takes so many years?Capital Budget:
View attachment 532740
Substantially deferred for another year with only 1M flowing in 2024 on the left.
More money in 2025, then real money in each of 2026, 2027, 2028 and 2029
What a bizarre way to manage a project and cause it to be more costly than would otherwise be the case if you staged and built in one year only.
Capital Budget:
View attachment 532740
Substantially deferred for another year with only 1M flowing in 2024 on the left.
More money in 2025, then real money in each of 2026, 2027, 2028 and 2029
What a bizarre way to manage a project and cause it to be more costly than would otherwise be the case if you staged and built in one year only.
You must work for the city!Hey, we're coming up on 15 years since this thread was started, what's another year delay amirite
Thank you as this was the sort of answer that I was looking for!I'm looking at the way the money is parceled and it suggests doing more or less 1-2 blocks per year. (125M) at an average cost of ~13M per section.
That's over 100M per km.
Thank you as this was the sort of answer that I was looking for!