sunnyraytoronto
Senior Member
Don't know about Emerald Park itself, but much of the area supports cycle tracks based on the REImaging Yonge study! Too bad for the others that like to treat this area as a freeway rather than contributing to the area. Hope they use Bathurst and Bayview more to get to the 401!
Many of the folks who use Yonge Street as a freeway as you call it,... also live in the high density condos of the Yonge Corridor in the NorthYorkCentreSecondaryPlan from 401 to FinchHydroCorridor which will continue to host more new developments. And of course now the YongeStreetNorthSecondaryPlan area (north of FinchHydroCorridor to Steeles) and all the high density development 905 will be building on their side of Steeles will start soon too. Of course all these new high-density developments need the proper infrastructure to support them including cycling and adequate traffic capacity on various roadways; especially since Yonge Subway line only goes up to Finch with no plans for extension for at least another 30 years.
Actually, Bathurst isn't even a full interchange for Highway 401, it just as a couple of ramps; thus it's much safer for cyclist to use Bathurst to cross 401 VS Yonge-401 interchange.
Actually, your statement "much of the area supports cycle tracks based on the REImaging Yonge study" is wrong.
I participated in every stage of community consultation for ReImagining Yonge Street Study,.... most of the participants wanted changes to the streetscape on Yonge Street in NorthYorkCentre,... since CityPlanning has been relying on development for those changes over the years while City have been constantly changing their own template! Thus, Yonge Street streetscape as elements from Post WW2 to SheppardCentre moat of 1970's to sunken marble blocks sidewalk of NorthYorkCityCentre of 1980's to new format pedestrian sidewalk design with in-ground tree planters as found in front of Tridel HullmarkCentre and Bazis EmeraldPark. Plus, there's the incomplete tree-lined centre medians which was originally supported by the communities in mid-1990's as part of the adaptation of the North York Centre Secondary Plan which started to allow for high density residential development right on Yonge Street (only offices were allowed previously) in exchange for wider pedestrian sidewalks and tree-lined centre median. Problem is the tree-lined centre median only got built on Yonge Street from about Greenfield Ave to Parkview Ave,... instead of from Highway 401 up to Finch Hydro Corridor as originally planned because Mayor Mel Lastman rediverted that money to save the North York Centre For Performing Arts.
But what should be the changes the ReImagining Yonge Street Study should design for? There was two equal sides,... one side strongly supported tree-lined centre median and tress on the pedestrian sidewalk,... whereas the other groups strongly suppported cycling infrastructure on Yonge Street.
PipolChap, you're mistake is in assuming that all the participants of the ReImagining Yonge Street Study were locals from the area,.... Walk down Yonge Street in NorthYorkCentre and pay attention to the ethnicity of the people you come across. Click on the "Consultation" tab and go through the slides looking at the photos of the participants,.... there's not many of the local Korean, Persian or Chinese demographic represented,...
http://www1.toronto.ca/wps/portal/contentonly?vgnextoid=a331edb9b72d3510VgnVCM10000071d60f89RCRD
Every cycling study the city has done over the years shows local cycling participation in NorthYorkCentre is actually below the city average of 1%. Why? Simple,.. all the high density developments do not encourage cycling - the high density condo residents already live within walking distance of most places they want to go along Yonge Street! For each condo development, the city requires about 1 bike parking space for every 10 condo units; when there's an average of 2.5 people living in a condo unit, that's at most 1 bike for every 25 condo resident. The city requires basically 1 car parking space for every single condo unit on average,.... thus for every bike parking space, there's 10 car parking space in a condo development. Do you think condo residents of NorthYorkCentre favour cycling infrastructure at the cost of losing traffic lanes, losing parking lanes on Yonge Street and far more gridlock traffic congestion in the area?
And make no mistake as their traffic modelling for 15 years shows on page 10 of their proposal,.... the traffic gridlock caused by eliminating 2 lanes of traffic on Yonge Street will be huge,... imagine what traffic was like here 15 years ago compared to now,... 15 years ago all the Avondale Community Condominiums were still under construction, now there's about 20 condo towers in the area,.... and about 50 new condo towers added to NorthYorkCentreSecondaryPlan area,..... that gives you an idea of what 15 years of traffic congestion looks like,... Now imagine all the development going forward to the next 15 years (actually even more development since YongeStreetNorthSecondaryPlan area and 905-side high density development adding to the mix as well),..... Now when they eliminate 2 traffic lanes on Yonge Street,... that forward 15 years worth of congestion in this area will double!,... during peak time on Yonge Street, Doris Ave, Beecroft Road and onto the surrounding neighbourhood roads as well.
Furthermore, the ethnic demographic of the high-density condominium residents of NorthYorkCentre tends to be Korean, Persian and Chinese,... if you look on Yonge Street, they're more likely to be driving by in their Mercedes, BMW, or expensive sports car,.... most cyclists tend to be white males.
Bottom line,... the area locals were voting for the tree-lined centre median,.... but the non-locals were voting for cycling infrastructure on Yonge Street. How do I know? I've been advocating for various area improvements including cycling infrastructures for years and I spotted a number of cycling advocates from outside the area at ReImagining Yonge Street Study community consultation meetings,.... Here's the twitter account from CycleToronto encouraging their members to come show up at these meetings: https://twitter.com/cycleyonge?lang=en
Is it really shocking that's it's so easy to skew the results at city community consultation meetings? Even though there's over 100,000 residents in this Ward 23,... many are Korean, Persian and Chinese,... ethnicities that generally don't participate in local politics and community consultation meetings. Often there was more city staff and consultants than local residents present at these community consultation meetings! Out of ReImagining Yonge Street Study summer long project, there was probably just 200 distinct participants,... and at the end, only about 40 showed up at the final community meeting,.... and when I gave my on-line feedback on the last possible weekend, my feedback number was in the mid-30s. So, do you think it's difficult to skew these results?
Oh, and another lie about ReImagining Yonge Street Study proposal is wider pedestrian sidewalks,.... as I've shown in a previous post, the pedestrian sidewalk will actually be more narrow in front of EmeraldPark as they'll have to move the in-ground tree planters at the cost of pedestrian sidewalk width
http://urbantoronto.ca/forum/thread...-rosario-varacalli.4829/page-134#post-1162938
Go through the ReImagining Yonge Street Study proposal,... say the parking lane is 3.5m wide but they replace it with 2.7m wide cycle tracks,... hey, that'll give us about 0.8m for wider pedestrian sidewalks on each side, right? Wrong!,... since they'll widen the tree-line centre median from 3.2m to 4.5m. And they'll be adding more street furniture with up to 2.0m width for in-ground tree planter on the pedestrian sidewalk,... the actual width for pedestrians to walk on the pedestrian sidewalk will likely be more narrow than what we have now!
http://www1.toronto.ca/wps/portal/contentonly?vgnextoid=a331edb9b72d3510VgnVCM10000071d60f89RCRD
I'm all for creating cycling infrastructure,.... but the cost of ReImagining Yonge Street Study proposal of eliminating traffic lanes and parking lanes and narrower pedestrian walkways on Yonge Street in favour of wide cycle tracks will create traffic hell in North York Centre - not just on Yonge Street but also Doris Ave, Beecroft Road and the area local roads as cars try to find alternative routes to bypass this traffic mess. The Korean, Persian and Chinese ethnic restaurants and retailers will suffer the most - many will go out of business,.. this will result in the ethnic cleansing of the Korean, Persian and Chinese establishments on Yonge Street in North York Centre. In the long run, instead of improving the vitality of Yonge Street in NorthYorkCentre,... ReImagining Yonge Street Study proposal will be destroying the vitality of Yonge Street in NorthYorkCentre,.... it'll be full of empty stores.
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