balenciaga
Banned
I don't see anything wrong with those areas (which are also much denser than they look), but the widespread desire to maintain those areas more or less as is forever and always does impact how the City is densified.
In the context of the debate around Toronto's 1 Yonges being "too asian" and "not European enough," the wide swathes of Toronto we opt to keep low-ish (or moderate) density to some extent requires that developable sites be used to the maximum extent.
As I understand the official plan, one of the goals of downtown's condofication is specifically to head off any need to redevelop low rise downtown. So, the maybe excessive densities we see in some areas shouldn't just be seen in abstraction from low-rise downtown.
Yes, people always claim "it is fine the way it is", when it really is not. Take another look at the first photo (Huron street), http://goo.gl/maps/u69PC
is it really what our downtown should look like? Do these houses on the street we see really give Toronto "charm" and "character"?? Maybe I am crazy today, but they just look horrible to me. People will say why Toronto looks like Nebraska, instead of "how charming" seeing them.
Yes, Toronto is not European enough. Have we visited Europe? Do we see all these 2 storey houses all over central Paris, Vienna, Prague or Barcelona? I didn't. Europe may not have skyscrapers, but they don't have nearly as many low rise SFH either. Their cities have density 3X or 5X of Toronto. These houses don't give Toronto "character". They just make us less urban. They are really not that different from a pure suburb in North York or Etobicoke.
As to Asian cities, let's not worry about it. Toronto will never look like a big Asian city, not in 100 years. The entire GTA has the population of a mid-sized Asian city probably nobody has heard of. We simply don't have the density to remotely resemble Shanghai, Hong Kong or Seoul.