The buildings proposed to be demolished aren't heritage - none of the heritage apartments on Earl are proposed to be demolished or altered as part of this proposal. Change will need to come to all parts of Toronto, and it will regardless of people's level of comfort with higher density.
True.
I like Northern Light's comment re: the state owning a huge chunk of housing in the central city, but unfortunately that is not the reality we live in.
One must always believe change is possible (without being naive) in order for it to become reality. Toronto is starting to dabble with land trusts and fund co-ops again; that might be the perfect choice for some of the heritage buildings nearby here. Particularly the rental buildings.
Revolutions can be huge violent upheavals; but those rarely last; and the price paid is high.......
But revolutions can also be Quiet (see Quebec in the 1960s) (before the FLQ made it much louder) ..............
Seemingly minor changes to investment plans, gov't expenditures, tax rules and the like can affect surprisingly large change over time.
I'm all for the revolution or whatever, but I also know it's not going to happen in my lifetime as long as we continue to prioritize the monetary gains of existing homeowners.
That's certainly true as it applies the financialization/monetization of housing; including, but not limited to the home-buyer subsidies, capital gains exemptions/low rates, artificially low interest rates, and REITs among other things.
HCDs are an interesting animal, in that they certainly can benefit the perceived quality of life of existing homeowners (and area renters too); but....by somewhat curtailing redevelopment options in an area, they may actually suppress property values at the margins.
It's not Black and White in that regard.
Also important to note, HCDs do not in fact freeze areas as they are, 'neighbourhood zoning' comes closer to doing that than anything else.
HCDs apply in many areas with towers currently rising. What they require is some measure of respect for how the existing area 'feels' at grade.
I've said this before and I will continue to say it - we cannot allow pastoralism to dictate how our cities grow and change.
I certainly agree; but I would equally advocate that it's entirely possible to intensify and densify while keeping much of what people may enjoy in established areas:
(examples)
The use of brick as a building material, particularly for the podium levels, with warm tones not inconsistent w/those from older building periods.
Old-school fine-grained retail, and smaller blocks
Podium-level architecture with a bit of detail; it needn't be all 'Victorian' or 'Arts and Crafts'; though there is nothing wrong with those done properly.
But putting a bit more detailing in around windows/doors and rooflines does wonders.
High quality, mature street trees.
and
The illusion of human-scale. On a main street, keeping a street wall to about 4-5 floors on a sidestreet 2-3 depending on ceiling heights/elevations.
None of that precludes going 20-40 floors higher, just setback from the streetwall enough that you wouldn't notice it all walking on the same side of the street and only marginally from the other side of a narrow street.