sunnyraytoronto
Senior Member
So are you saying if this was just a three storey mall,... and no Walmart,... there wouldn't be any opposition to this development application?
He is saying if it were a 10 floor condo there would've be significantly less opposition. It isn't the size of the building, it is its contents that have people in outrage. (Specifically large box stores)
The whole city can become mindlessly monotone for all I care, but this particular stretch of downtown does not have to. Kensington market has a great deal of cultural value, and this goes well beyond any commercial value Wal-Mart may bring.
Because god knows Walmart sells organic coffee, used clothing, odd/rare spices, wonderful ethnic food, fresh fish and meat etc. etc...
Like I said before, if this was a shoppers and a fresh & wild no one would have cared. But it's big bad Walmart so it's evil incarnate. Even though a grocery store like fresh & wild or the new Loblaws urban, whole foods fighting concept would have ACTUALLY competed against Kenstington.
Good thing this isn't in Kensington then.
The "won't somebody please think of those poor poor people" arguments in favor of Walmart are pretty disingenuous.
Well, although it isn't in Kensington technically, it's broader impact will reach well beyond the borders of the market.
The "won't somebody please think of those poor poor people" arguments in favor of Walmart are pretty disingenuous.
Kensington market is a small bohemian fragment in a fairly mundane city. It has historical, cultural and touristic value that trumps it's retail value. I don't think that our society would lose too much in protecting this one particular place. It's about good governance above and beyond market forces (oh yes, that funny concept that our society increasingly seems to forget, good governance). Wal-Mart can go somewhere else.
But I never made that argument. Of course cities change and neighborhoods adapt. The character of Kensington market will certainly change due to this new entrant, which would will likely cause the market to become more upscale and more specialized, as the Wal-Mart intercepts many of it's would-be customers. Perhaps the grocers would close in favor of those dreaded specialty olive shops or high-end clothing stores. It's not the poor poor shopkeepers of Kensington Market that I'm worried about, it's that a Toronto in which Kensington becomes an upscale mall-ified version of itself is a worse Toronto than that of today.
Kensington market already went upscale long ago,.... Look at all the organic and specialty shops,.... If you want cheap grocery, go to Chinatown.