"Clear cutting" is not what would happen. Nobody is going to send in bulldozers to the whole neighbourhood. It's about not legally restricting intensification near existing infrastructure, which would occur gradually/organically over time as the market would dictate. Most buildings would remain in place for decades to come and certainly there are some individual structures that deserve to be protected.
IF someone calls the entire area ' a waste' you can't suggest they want modest, organic change.
That is advocacy for wholesale distraction.
Words have meanings and ought to be chosen carefully.
Case in point: there was a beautiful 100-ish year old building on a large corner lot my parents neighbourhood in Roncy/High Park. The family wanted a bigger house, and they were legally and easily able to completely raze that house and build a brand new bigger modern house on the lot. If they had wanted to turn that same lot into a 3-4 storey apartment building, it would have been illegal and required years of legal and bureaucratic wrangling that would have significantly increased the costs, most likely making it financially unviable. That is the potential zoning reform advocates are trying to unlock.
EDIT to add: And nobody wants to let those suburban lots off the hook, but in the immediate future they are less well served by transit.
Let's be clear.
As of right now, 4-plexes are legal, rooming houses and legal laneway suites are legal, and secondary suites are legal; and all of these are present in the Annex.
Let's concede w/o any equivocation that only 2 of those were legal for the last decade, the other 2 were made legal in the last 1-3 years.
Still this notion that hyper-restrictive zoning remains is entirely incorrect, and it's about to get a whole lot looser.
The annex is one of the neighbourhoods best served by transit in the continent, and it’s a travesty that our planning policies actively prevent people from living there unless you’re rich.
100% not true. The neigbhourhood is full of rental apartments, secondary suites, laneway homes, apartments over stores and more. The notion that this is some area that is entirely bourgeois is not supported by the facts.
here is, of course, a beautiful collection of mid sized apartment buildings in the annex which add greatly to the neighbourhood (and are some of the only affordable-ish options) but those would all be illegal to build today.
Let's be clear, rooming houses are legal, secondary suites are legal, laneway houses are legal, 4-plexes are legal, and within a few months six-storey apartments will be as well.
But to have these appear holus bolus is to destroy what makes the area one you want to live in now.
And, as I have repeatedly pointed out, and many have repeatedly ignored, brand new apartments/condos will not be any more affordable per ft2 than what exists now and truthfully, probably less.
So your solution either sustains or exacerbates the problem.
*****
We need to be 100% clear 350ft2 boxes are not acceptable living conditions; and the solution to housing costs exceeding incomes is not to build more of them. It's to raise incomes and supress demand, and free-up captive supply (Air BnB et al.) The end.