Honestly, I respect you as a poster, but I don't think this post looks good now, never mind how it ages.
It reads as badly as a firm NIMBY...."I want what I want when I want so give it to me"
There's a failure to recognize that your vote and preference is no more (or less) important than the next persons. AND
That most 'next' people don't share your vision.
Its not merely hirise vs lowrise or the aesthetics of brick vs precast though those certainly play a role.
Its the among of living space one desires. Even if you don't have kids...........let alone if you do.
Its easy for single people or those in tight couples with high personal space tolerance to say everyone should live in 500ft2, or even 700ft2.
The reality is most people desire, if not need, at least 1,000ft2, even if they're single.......a family of 4 needs 2,000ft2., plus a yard.
I say that as a champion of higher density, someone who lives in multi-storey rental building, and uses transit regularly.
I'm always astounded by people thinking their preferences (not better ideas) should prevail over the preferences of others.
We can and should offer better rental and midrise accommodation (but we haven't been) ; but even now, the stuff people want to be excited about, new mass-timer, and 6-9s mainstreeet builds...are coming in
with 500ft2 1bdrms, 2bdrms at sub 700ft2, and few 3bdrms, most under 1,000ft2
.
Few people who have or want to start families will accept this.
Yes, we can be more efficient that traditional SFH in more places, and we should. Scrapping SFH bungalows along Victoria Park for midrise sounds grand.
But the idea that small little boxes in the sky are the answer for everyone and anyone not interested is the enemy strikes me as a profound problem and something that sets the cause of good urban planning back.
It can, it has, and it will produce a virulent backlash.
Unless and until, we achieve minimum unit sizes, 25% or more 3-bedroom accommodation, and greater outdoor space and/or sidestreets kids can go play on safely........ we're setting up a no-win situation.