rdaner
Senior Member
The fit out of several retail spaces has begun with drywall installed. Photos taken 29 June.
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The fact that we don't have a single pedestrianized street in the city outside of distillery disneyland is so infuriating. My vote is for Ossington between Queen and DundasI've always loved Draper St. and would never want to see the old houses touched, however I imagine some of the "charm" of living there is gone now that they're walled in by condos. I'd love to see it evolve into a sort of mixed-used street that resembles something like Markham St. in Mirvish Village. It could be a mix of shops, offices and residential with care to preserve the houses inside and out. And of course I'd pedestrianize Draper as well.
I vote for that plus Kensington Market + pedestrian Sundays (every weekend) on Queen West.The fact that we don't have a single pedestrianized street in the city outside of distillery disneyland is so infuriating. My vote is for Ossington between Queen and Dundas
Market Street is going car free until Oct 5 this summer. It's small but a step in the right direction. Still, I agree entirely, we have effectively no pedestrian streets, certainly not anything on a large or even medium scale.The fact that we don't have a single pedestrianized street in the city outside of distillery disneyland is so infuriating. My vote is for Ossington between Queen and Dundas
The City could easily pedestrianize Church St between Alexander St and Wellesley St, with very few negative impacts other than rich people in Forest Hill losing their express route into downtown. The parking garage behind/below SteamWorks has an entrance off Maitland. The other parking lot on Church south of Maitland is becoming a condo anyway, but already has laneway access from behind. Heck, even deliveries could largely be done from the laneways. But this would require the City to care about the Church-Wellesley Village outside of one weekend a year.The fact that we don't have a single pedestrianized street in the city outside of distillery disneyland is so infuriating. My vote is for Ossington between Queen and Dundas
The City could easily pedestrianize Church St between Alexander St and Wellesley St, with very few negative impacts other than rich people in Forest Hill losing their express route into downtown. The parking garage behind/below SteamWorks has an entrance off Maitland. The other parking lot on Church south of Maitland is becoming a condo anyway, but already has laneway access from behind. Heck, even deliveries could largely be done from the laneways. But this would require the City to care about the Church-Wellesley Village outside of one weekend a year.
(For additional context, Montreal pedestrianizes it's Gay Village along Rue St Catherine (a significantly more important road than Church St) every summer)
Montreal pedestrianizes more then just the ‘Gay Village’’ section of St Catherine’s ( to mixed results) but I would argue its impact on traffic is negligible at best,The City could easily pedestrianize Church St between Alexander St and Wellesley St, with very few negative impacts other than rich people in Forest Hill losing their express route into downtown. The parking garage behind/below SteamWorks has an entrance off Maitland. The other parking lot on Church south of Maitland is becoming a condo anyway, but already has laneway access from behind. Heck, even deliveries could largely be done from the laneways. But this would require the City to care about the Church-Wellesley Village outside of one weekend a year.
(For additional context, Montreal pedestrianizes it's Gay Village along Rue St Catherine (a significantly more important road than Church St) every summer)
I've had bowel movements longer than market street...it's diminutive but yes cute and charmingMarket Street is going car free until Oct 5 this summer. It's small but a step in the right direction. Still, I agree entirely, we have effectively no pedestrian streets, certainly not anything on a large or even medium scale.
a few weeks too late! The city was originally planning to pedestrianize Kensington in a reconstruction next summer but local merchants complained and last week council voted to reconstruct the street with vehicle access still..I vote for that plus Kensington Market + pedestrian Sundays (every weekend) on Queen West.
a few weeks too late! The city was originally planning to pedestrianize Kensington in a reconstruction next summer but local merchants complained and last week council voted to reconstruct the street with vehicle access still..