HowarkRoark
New Member
A great addition to the neighbourhood. It's a bit sketchy right now but a development like this is the first big step towards elevating the profile of the area.
Completely disagree, I like neighbourhoods that embrace their grittiness. This area is an art hub, one of the last remaining truly 'alternative' areas in the city and it's just going to be another sterile block where there are no unique businesses and creatives are pushed out for condos nobody can afford.A great addition to the neighbourhood. It's a bit sketchy right now but a development like this is the first big step towards elevating the profile of the area.
Well that's a bit melodramatic. We're hardly in danger of losing the fine-grained retail on Bloor. This is replacing a bank branch, not exactly the pinnacle of "alternative" culture. Any rental units will have to be replaced under the city's rental replacement policy.Completely disagree, I like neighbourhoods that embrace their grittiness. This area is an art hub, one of the last remaining truly 'alternative' areas in the city and it's just going to be another sterile block where there are no unique businesses and creatives are pushed out for condos nobody can afford.
Investors pulling equity from their existing units for down-payments on new ones.??? If nobody can afford them, how do they get sold out so quickly?
"Alternative"? There's literally a strip club two doors down. No thanks. If you don't like the neighbourhood improving you're free to make a high enough offer to buy the land from RioCan.Completely disagree, I like neighbourhoods that embrace their grittiness. This area is an art hub, one of the last remaining truly 'alternative' areas in the city and it's just going to be another sterile block where there are no unique businesses and creatives are pushed out for condos nobody can afford.
Club Paradise (strip club).This weekend...
Is the hollowing out of the red a result of empty nesters holding onto their single-family homes after the kids move away? Or larger families moving away and being replaced by smaller ones? Because it's not like housing is being torn down and not replaced.Well that's a bit melodramatic. We're hardly in danger of losing the fine-grained retail on Bloor. This is replacing a bank branch, not exactly the pinnacle of "alternative" culture. Any rental units will have to be replaced under the city's rental replacement policy.
The neighbourhood is in a long-term population decline thanks to shrinking household sizes. Just look at this sea of red:
The only green areas on that map are the areas where apartments are being built. Everything else is being hollowed out.
Preserving the current built form in amber and slamming the door on anyone who can't afford a single-family home isn't going to help anyone. We need more people and more housing options if we want the neighbourhood to survive and thrive. I hope we don't lose the grit and character (I liked it enough and was fortunate enough to be able to buy a house just down the street), but the status quo isn't an option.
Household sizes are declining across Canada and there are a few factors at play here. Families are smaller across the board and there are more people living alone, but also affordability in the city is so bad that I imagine a lot of people have to move farther out to start a family. You're right that the physical nature of the neighbourhoods is the same as it always was, more or less, so it's mostly an invisible phenomenon. We have roughly the same number of houses, but way more empty bedrooms.Is the hollowing out of the red a result of empty nesters holding onto their single-family homes after the kids move away? Or larger families moving away and being replaced by smaller ones? Because it's not like housing is being torn down and not replaced.
Yeah - Bohemian. Kind of like Kensington. Full of unique people thrifting in vintage shops, working in nearby art studios etc. MOCA is nearby and there are so many local shops and creative businesses that I frequent. I just want them to stay and I worry they will just be gentrified out. The area has a Montreal ( Plateau-Mont Royal ) vibe. Not many places are truly left like this in TO, when there are condos the reality is we always get generic street-level offerings."Alternative"? There's literally a strip club two doors down. No thanks. If you don't like the neighbourhood improving you're free to make a high enough offer to buy the land from RioCan
Landsdowne is nothing like the Plateau in Montreal. Where is the Parc Lahaie? Where is the L'Avenue? Where are the colouful houses and murals?Yeah - Bohemian. Kind of like Kensington. Full of unique people thrifting in vintage shops, working in nearby art studios etc. MOCA is nearby and there are so many local shops and creative businesses that I frequent. I just want them to stay and I worry they will just be gentrified out. The area has a Montreal ( Plateau-Mont Royal ) vibe. Not many places are truly left like this in TO, when there are condos the reality is we always get generic street-level offerings.