Irishmonk
Senior Member
Some here would even defend the messy urbanism of Toronto's hydro poles and broken sidewalks!
You had me up to there.
Some here would even defend the messy urbanism of Toronto's hydro poles and broken sidewalks!
That may, or may not be true. But this is Urban Toronto ... not Urban Planet.The rest of the world outside North America, including many English speaking nations, consider the world to be 6 continents.
Interesting. From the references, the latter is clearly a Greater Golden Horseshoe type number of which Toronto would be 8.1 million in 2006. The former is odd, as the same reference only gives 5.9 to Toronto - which is only about the current estimate for the Toronto CMA excluding even Oshawa and Hamilton. Yet Chicago in the same reference is 9.8 million and LA is 18.1 million - which means they are using the US CSA's for that ... huge swaths of land for those cities which for LA extends to Nevada; very apples and oranges ... would be taking that with a grain of salt.From wiki (bless their...er, our hearts)
"The Greater London Urban Area is the second-largest in the EU with a population of 8,278,251,[20] while London's metropolitan area is the largest in the EU with an estimated total population of between 12 million[21] and 14 million."
Are the residents happy with the way it is, or would they want an increase in crowds, outlets, varieties of uses? I suspect a lot of people who live right there might be happy with the current mood of the street.
Maybe we should accept and play up the uptight nature of the stretch. Really go for a comprehensive design that makes your ass and jaw clench and your collar feel tighter just thinking about it.
As for University Avenue, when I was in Barcelona last week walking along Las Ramblas, I couldn't help but feel University Avenue's ghost superimposed on this beautiful pedestrian walkway. I'd love to see University Av's central corridor redone completely as a wide pedestrian walkway, flanked by inward facing trees and small cafés with outdoor seating dotting the trip up to Queens Park.
Has anyone noticed that 9 out of 13 intersections on bay in between Queen and Bloor do not have buildings on all 4 corners?
I think that surface parking lots on most of its intersections definitely make it a much less attractive place to walk around.
I biked down Bay last week and the prominence of these lots all over was the main streetscape ruining feature.