Quote:
Originally Posted by zoomer
Thanks for the Google Maps link harls.
Every city in Canada has a legacy of planning mistakes that we’re still trying to undo, but we keep piling on. Not to pick on this one too harshly as it’s not the worst by any means, but it should be possible to nearly always design buildings and neighbourhoods that don’t feel depressing. That’s not too much to ask.
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I had friends who lived in one of those buildings back in the 2000s. I once got all drunk on OE at their place, lost one of my shoes (in the apartment), and decided to go to a bar across the street (in the mall parking lot) anyway. This was during a Winnipeg winter. I learned something valuable about homelessness that day: OE hits different.
Anyway the apartments were big a cheap. Perfect for students or people on their first jobs. The surroundings are depressing looking, but you actually have pretty good amenities at the mall, the highway-looking stroad out front has a speed limit of 50 km/h, and bus service to downtown and the U of M is pretty good. It's even walkable to some of Winnipeg's best neighbourhoods. And the SFH neighbourhood behind isn't as single-use as it looks. There's a pretty good legion back there with snooker tables.
I'm not saying it's awesome or anything. But you could do worse. Some suburban areas are just impossible to unfuck--tangles of stroads and cul-de-sacs that'll never gel urban no matter how many far-flung transit stops and TODs we build. This area though? It'll never be great but throw up some five and ones on the mall parking lot and loosen the zoning a bit, I bet it would be more than OK.