Northern Light
Superstar
ill apologize once your plan gets anywhere other than the echo chamber of this forum
I didn't put forward a plan; I endorsed the previous plan (technically, for now, the current plan)
. The height is good and is appropriate considering the insane housing supply shortage Toronto (and Canada) are experiencing right now.
You are welcome to your opinion; however, I think you are incorrect, I think it's the wrong solution to the problem, as currently proposed, and it creates more problems than it solves as currently proposed.
Concerns of parkland being overrun (as well as the bizarre comment from another poster wondering how much space each resident would have if they were all placed within the park at the same time) simply don't hold up to reality. Humber Bay Shores, as i'm sure you are aware, is incredibly high in density and the waterfront park is absolutely alive with people enjoying the weather on any given summer evening. I prefer to cycle there from New Toronto in order to experience the liveliness of the area, as opposed to the quiet parks of my area, brought on by a shrinking and aging population.
In point of fact, Humber Bay Shores is desperately short of parkland, I have been there on summer weekends and good luck finding an empty bench to sit at; the trails are clogged, and the vegetation is suffering from being trampled.
Moreover, Humber Bay Shores has many problems (just ask the residents); no school for kids, no library, initially, no supermarket, and still only one, which is awkwardly situated; very poor transit service and perpetual traffic jams for those driving.
It's nice that you live in an area w/o these issues and dismiss summarily the concerns of those who do live in these areas and have to deal with them.
The issue is not density or height, it's density relative to provision of necessary services. At those density levels, the area should be on a subway, it needs its own high school, it needs a library and so on and so on.
These things can be addressed; though if the density were a bit less extreme in that one spot and spread around a bit more, the infrastructure could be provided more cost-effectively.
* for the record, by the way, I live in an apartment (multi--storey) in an apartment neighbourhood, just so we can squash all this anti-density nonsense.
As much as you would love to chalk up taller towers to "developer greed'
Excuse me? At no point did I use the word greed; (I just searched that term in my name, and nothing came up in this thread in the last 2 calendar years.)
If you want to quote me, quote me.
This change is not being initiated by developers, it's a public policy choice that I happen to think is incorrect, as proposed.
More affordable housing is needed, but this is not, in my opinion the best, or most affordable way to achieve that.