People love to pick on Cabbagetown but it's not even close to being either the richest nor the lowest density area in the city. Shameless hyperbole.
I am sympathetic to Cabbagetowners as, in a generally unlovely city riddled with eyesores, it is one of the only areas that has any architectural coherence or notable charm.... Located at the centre of the highest concentrations of public housing and homeless shelters in the entire city, it looks and feels the way it does is because its residents have maintained, cared for and sometimes fought for the preservation of its heritage buildings and streetscapes - for generation after generation. As such, all Torontonians get to enjoy it.
Maybe taller buildings on Parliament are appropriate - but please - let's not pretend that greenlighting 10 clunky storeys of entirely market-rate housing, designed in Sketch-Up, & breaking multiple zoning bylaws is responsible planning and/or will somehow magically solve the housing crisis in Toronto. It's just going to be more sh*tty condos for so-called "rich" people. So enough with the socioeconomic equity argument. The only equity issue addressed in this proposal is the profit incentive for the private equity managed by Streetwise Capital.