Towered
Superstar
Superior? Hmm, where have I heard that word before...ah, yes: Europe in 1937 I think.
Is that seriously your counter argument? As if it wasn't obvious before, but this confirms your status as this forum's latest clown.
Superior? Hmm, where have I heard that word before...ah, yes: Europe in 1937 I think.
Superior? Hmm, where have I heard that word before...ah, yes: Europe in 1937 I think.
Is that seriously your counter argument? As if it wasn't obvious before, but this confirms your status as this forum's latest clown.
Sure. We wouldn't have out Interstate/400-series superhighway networks, or our ticky-tacky single-family sprawl, without Europe-in-1937 precedent.
Also, don't forget the refugees from Naziism who institutionalized modern architecture and planning in N America. So, even in spite of dictatorships, so-called European planning superiority ruled...
Opinions are like a$%-holes: everyone's got one.
There are places in suburbia that are tacky, just like there are places downtown that are tacky. One is not automatically superior than the other. People need to climb down off their lofty perches and get over themselves.
The auto is here to stay (sales UP again by 5% in July). Wishing them away, or trying to slowly squeeze them to death is not going to work.
Of course they aren't going away, but there are ways to build cities that can minimize the need for cars. Isn't there a better use for land in Toronto than 1900 parking spots? Thats an insane amount of cars and the traffic around there will become a nightmare!
You argue like you're 12 years old.
I urge the rest of you not to bother with this guy.
Both of you are pretty new here, neither with more than 500 posts on anything. I'd say let the Mods decide who's debate worthy.You argue like you're 12 years old.
I urge the rest of you not to bother with this guy.
I dunno: if the choice is between a wall of 50 story condos and a parking lot, I'll take the parking lot, thanks.
I guess that's as good a summation of your philosophy as we can hope for.
And while I would never try to deny your much cherished right to assert your beliefs on this board, I do wonder why you've decided to nest here of all places -- the Urban Toronto Forum.
Surely the CAA has some kind of discussion group?
I dunno: if the choice is between a wall of 50 story condos and a parking lot, I'll take the parking lot, thanks.
Your views are obviously deeply held and there is not much someone like me (or anyone on this board) can say to change them. I'm probably just as unpersuadable from my end.
It's one of those unbridgeable gaps: You seem genuinely distressed by the city's increasing density whereas I think it's fantastic -- the more the better. On another thread (I think it was the one about the proposed redevelopment of the Cumberland Theatre), you raised the specter of Toronto winding up like Hong Kong -- as if that would be a bad thing. HK happens to be the most beautiful and exciting city I have ever seen.