allengeorge
Senior Member
Same article stated that Oakville did the same?
I stand corrected!Same article stated that Oakville did the same?
No. Only that the city would “study” it. I’m skeptical.So did today's announcement include the raising of units per lot to 6?
Wonderful idea - it's obvious and I fully support it. Draper doesn't make sense anymore as a purely residential street. Would it simply be a case of re-zoning the street to make retail/nightlife viable in the historic houses?
Better yet, put no restrictions on night activity, which would encourage the residents to sell to someone who will use the property more appropriately without assembling them. Assembling them would ultimately destroy the uniqueness of the street and become just an extension of the Well itself.That would be one way to do it, but would probably have more restrictions on night activity as residents would still be on the street for years to come.
The better way would probably be for a developer to do a huge land assembly here. Which then would probably mean mixed use development with condos above the historic houses, retaining the facades at street level.
I would assume there is at least a sizeable group of owners on the street currently looking to head out for greener pastures, considering all the construction and density going up all around them.
My opinion is that a good part of the pre-war downtown residential neighborhoods should be rezoned as mixed-use to allow people to open up businesses on the ground floors and expand from the existing typologies, as was the case until the sanitary regime took over in the post-war era.Wonderful idea - it's obvious and I fully support it. Draper doesn't make sense anymore as a purely residential street. Would it simply be a case of re-zoning the street to make retail/nightlife viable in the historic houses?