evandyk
Senior Member
The park and the river mouth certainly will be.
Wide Front St in Canary is killing it as a place to walk/hang out? Whereabouts? I see no issue with the redeveloped streetscape here, for pedestrians I think the less appealing parts of Front St are west of Trinity.True, but once you've given it to roads and planned buildings around it, it's hard to go back and create a more vibrant neighbourhood. I still have hopes that Canary is going to get a lot better as it fills up, but that wide Front St is killing it as a place to walk/hang out.
Yeah. Even though there's some decent restaurants and a nice coffee shop, you can walk the whole strip and hardly see another human. The grocery store may help bring a little life, but the wide expanse makes it seem uninviting and it would take a lot of foot traffic to change that.Wide Front St in Canary is killing it as a place to walk/hang out? Whereabouts? I see no issue with the redeveloped streetscape here, for pedestrians I think the less appealing parts of Front St are west of Trinity.
Cool shots as always, @hawcMeanwhile, over at the street formerly known as Villiers...
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It is certainly exciting to see the north plug being exposed but, just because they COULD remove the north plug does not mean they will. I am not an expert, but it may be better to finish the river work north of it (the ice and debris area) and the dredging of the Villiers channel first so that the new river valley does not get 'flooded' with all the crap that is there at the moment. Last I heard they were talking of opening the north plug in 'fall 2024' and we may need to wait until then.Wow that North Plug digging is moving along really quickly. When do they hope to have that gone by? I'm hoping just a month or two more, not like Fall 2024.
Excellent pics above @skycandy .
Looking at this one:
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I observe a couple of dead confers in the planting mix and a couple more looking very sickly, though a majority seem to be doing ok. I wonder if they got wind burn, young transplanted conifers are very susceptible to that, that's why you often see them wrapped in burlap for their first winter.
The two cedars off amidst the grass have my attention due to heir form. They look suspiciously like a Cedar cultivar to me. That particular conical form isn't what I would typically expect from the pure native, though, there is always
individual variation.
You really are quite impatient aren't you! :->What it will start to look like when they finally break through.
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