Judging by Amare's post, that outdated 70s SFH political culture built more parks than today's more urban minded development
I get what you're saying, but I think you're overstating your case
@concrete_and_light but yes, more high quality parks are needed, not just sun scorched empty wastelands.
@Northern Light let's get those trees planted!
I definitely see what you mean and when I read Amare's post I thought the same, that it went against what I was saying a bit. It made me reflect: why is it that our political culture was better at making these investments in the past, but we've become so unable to now?
I haven't fully thought it through and of course it is the result of a complex web of factors, but I feel like an aspect of this is the ossification of politics and society as a means to create change and build for the future. People got comfortable with a certain way the world was working — working for some. Going to university affordably turned into a stable job turned into a house, turned into ever-increasing property wealth and a theoretical good life for your children (climate change and growing inequality and the housing crisis have wrecked that, but people have a hard time reckoning with how they've failed the next generation so people are largely in denial about that).
People emerged from the Cold War with a certainty of the correctness of the neoliberal consensus and went into prosperous times ready for smooth sailing through their adulthoods into their retirements, into the end of history. Life's good paying low taxes in the end of history.
And as this culture took over our political systems they just... well they just kinda haven't really done much. I'm not sure they know that they can? That they're allowed?
The parks and other significant investments in Toronto's civic infrastructure (even the suspect ones like the Gardiner or the suburbs themselves) were products of a political and civic culture that is completely different from the one now — coming out of WWII seeing the collective mobilization effort of that conflict and the ability of society when challenged, modernism giving a sense of the potential for deliberate and designed transformation of society and the earth and human potential. Society tried to do things, even if some of them ended up not working out.
Now we have basically abdicated doing anything. Ah jeez you know it's just the way it is? Budgets are tight, if we upset the economy too much, you know, it will all fall apart... So we can't, we just can't. We wish we could do something we really do.
We fund things with the coins we find in the cracks, or can only manage something with some kind of fabled private partnership.
The political weight that holds this status quo is attached to the format of the past — the structure of the city, the private backyards, the ever-increasing property wealth, the smooth-sailing streets to drive along — but this status quo has lost sight of the investment that created that world.
And as everyone retreated, we lost our ability to build a park, to build and foster civic space. It is ironic as you point out that now as we value urbanism so much more we have such terrible urban experience and investment in the city. But I don't think this is really reflective of the failure of urbanism as an idea or a political movement, it's more that literally for once could we just let progressive thoughtful urbanists be in charge and make some good decisions? Urbanist policy and ideas have never been given a chance to bloom.
It is the case with the 2150 Lake Shore development that thoughtful forward thinking investments are coming through to the city in the form of a private development. Neoliberalism works... occasionally! But there are some things — major parks, infrastructure, etc. — that really only the city can do and we are not always so lucky to see such thoughtful plans from developers as we do here. As we see every day in these threads and as we move through our lives in the city, most of the city is falling apart, built on the cheap for investors, feeding a market that drives inequality and stifles the life and culture of the city through crushing unaffordability, with barely any investment put into the things that make a city work and make a city a place to live a good life and a beautiful place. The city has been stuck on pause through the destruction and trauma of the Ford era and the timid status quo of the Tory era as we wait for our city's voters and political leadership to realize that a city is something that needs to be *built*.
Anyway, those are just some thoughts. Just theorizing, but regardless of of what is the cause of this inability of our city to get things done, I think there is a growing awareness that something is going to have to change or else Toronto's going to hit a breaking point of inequality and lack of infrastructure. To some extent I think we're already locked-in into hitting this breaking point since investments even if begun now will take years, decades to make an impact. It is going to be a rough next while for the city, but hopefully a stronger civic culture can be built from the hardship and the awareness it brings.