Quote:
Originally Posted by Vin
Anyone here extremely excited that they have decided to redesign the retail portion to look like a mall than what they had in the previous rendition? Well, Vin is a happy camper: at least someone is listening. Now if only they can also have an underground portion to link with Telus Garden, Vancouver Centre, the Holborn block (Bay parkade) and Pacific Centre mall. **1.
Yes, it is very exciting. Unfortunately we can only do this with heritage warehouses that happen to be located downtown. Don't think the City would accept something like this for a new structure. First of all, they would think this is "NOT HUMAN SCALE". **2.
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*1. Yes, it would be nice to link up parts of downtown Vancouver with an underground pedestrian systyem. I'm not advocating THE PATH in Toronto, or Place Ville Marie.
But that argument that it will 'deaden' the street level life isn't relevant here, as it
would be around alberni or Robson, where street level life is integral to the "well being" of the city.
This part of Vancouver is largely built-out office complexes, and though we don't have the harsh long continental winter to justify it, the relentless winter rains are nice to get out of.
*2. As for the city fathers claiming that a new such structure would not be "HUMAN SCALE" is, IMO, partly because Vancouver is only just starting to become a true 'big city' city.
People like that "small town" feeling that it has always had until now; plus a lot of the policymakers are from small towns themselves (Geoff Meggs is such), and don't 'think big'.
For many, -and I make no value judgements here - Vancouver is better with a "quaint" small city feeling, than bowing to become a big metropolis; it isn't yet, but is on the road to being.
Nevertheless, the writing is on the wall, and over the next ten years or so, IMO Vancouver will bump up up into another league, not Toronto or Houston, but big nonetheless.
This all reinforces what you were saying, and will be very noticeable in a decade. I think that is largely why good infrastructure of all types is so necessary to build ... now.
(and thank you, Rofina, you summed it up concisely; I'm just elaborating on what VIN said

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