Super meh, which to be honest I'm not surprised is the product here. DTAH are fine to give you a perfectly acceptable space, but they're never going to bring you big, grand ideas of the scale that could genuinely transform the quality of and access to this space.
This would be a fine plan -- and DTAH would be a good choice -- if the project here was just a regular, sort of housekeeping-plus approach to bringing up the Island to some sort of state of good repair and public realm design, but that's not really how this work was positioned. The Island is such a special place and such a unique resource that I think it deserved a much grander vision than this firm could be hoped to deliver.
What we have here instead appears to be the sort of niggling at the edges of stuff that cities that care more about the public realm would've done over the years as a matter of course, rather than the outcome of a yearslong visioning and consultation process.
I essentially agree with the above...........
But I would add the following.
I don't have a problem with 'housekeeping'; I do have a problem with wasting six figures (or more) on a planning process that it didn't require.
I don't have any objection to grand visions, but I do think, they require focus, and shouldn't generally include much to do with the routine housekeeping.
To me, the Islands would benefit from any number of modest improvements that don't need a grand plan. Installation of Bikeshare across the Island, Basic Canopy coverage (Weather protection) for those waiting for the ferry, enhance concessions offerings, lots of state-of-good repair etc. These things should just be done, as-of-right, without the need for a consultant enrichment program.
Grand Ideas should be much tighter, we could all put forward a few, I won't attempt any exhaustive list here, but rather just afford a couple of examples:
1) Turning Avenue of the Islands into a grand walking and cycling route, with parallel modal offerings, leading from the Centre Island Ferry Dock to Centre Beach, and being a grand space all the way, with great horticultural displays (flowers) both perennial, and annual, native and ornamental, grand lighting, high quality interlock, beautiful and comfortable seating, great ornamental fountains, and exceptional, architectural washrooms and concession pavilions at both ends.
That's one complete idea. Farm it out to Cormier, stop there, walk away.
2) One big move for the environment, pick out one area where there is room to repurpose at least 5 contiguous acres, more, if possible, with a focus on enhancing/recreating habitats unique to the islands that would disproportionately serve endangered species. Hand it over to MVVA in conjunction w/TRCA, get it done, walk away.
The point of these two ideas above being that when you have focus you have some hope of delivering one complete thought properly. When your ideas involve a bit here, and a bit there and something for everyone over a park of several hundred acres, you know lots of listed projects will never happen at all, and others will be VE'd to the point of making them a largely wasted effort.
One could choose other or additional big ideas; but I'm loathe to make long lists as they simply end up disappointing almost everyone.
In summary, I favour strong house-keeping, and a short list of bold ideas that will actually happen and be properly executed.
Budget accordingly.
PS, my ideas above would cost, in my judgement, about 40M to deliver properly, plus housekeeping of another 10M
The City is unlikely to set aside anywhere near that amount, with a much longer list to fulfill
* One final note, those renders/lists I posted above are only 1/2 the list! I'll post the others later.