Streety McCarface
Senior Member
I doubt bike lanes and wide sidewalks on their own would suffice. Aren't tax breaks the way municipalities attract businesses? Besides, if businesses are opening suburban locations, they would need parking anyhow, unless the entire area is being massively redeveloped with a lot of high density residential (and maybe not even then). Congestion on Sheppard between Yonge and Don Mills is already pretty bad in the PM peak, so I would not remove lanes without giving drivers viable transit options.
He was referring to commuters living around Line 4 who commute north to York Region, not downtown.
The idea is area revitalization. Not everyone can bike or walk the area but if everyone is accommodated, then that will increase the desirability of the area for businesses. With regards to traffic congestion, again, there is a a SUBWAY along that corridor. It’s probably best that we focus on transit more than the car along these corridors. It will set the precedent that sheppard between Yonge and don mills is a transit area. Parking will be a must for transitions, but must be able to be repurposed easily.
Also, my bad @11th I misread your comment. Until viva green gets much better service and fares are integrated, transit will always be a bitch to use up there.