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Originally Posted by WhipperSnapper
The post in summary is all about the affordable housing crisis and that owners are impeding building our way out of the crisis for taking an interest in their communities beyond what they own. Typical ultra pro development mentality on these forums that is so short sighted. FFS,
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It's great that you're taking the time to summarize your reading of posts to help identify possible misunderstandings. In this case that's definitely not my intended meaning. I neither said nor implied that people shouldn't take an interest in their communities beyond their own homes. What I said is they shouldn't take that specific interest (how big the interiors of other people's homes are). Adding density does not necessitate ignoring planning principles and in fact planning principles often encourage density. You can take an interest in the exterior design of neighbouring buildings, how they meet the street, the amount of greenery, the height of buildings, and even the total number of units being built in an area. I might disagree with the positions people take on those topics but I wouldn't say it was none of their business. I limit that statement to only things that are none of people's business.
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Originally Posted by WhipperSnapper
The affordable housing crisis is not a housing supply issue. There's thousands of units for rent at any time in Toronto. This isn't like the East Coast of Canada.
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"Thousands of units for rent" doesn't mean much. In a city of 3 million, if the average household size is 2.1 then there would be about 1.36 million households. If that roughly equals the number of units and if only 1% are vacant, that would be about 13.5k vacant units which certainly qualifies as thousands. But a 1% vacant rate is well below a healthy level and and does not represent any spare supply. It's similar to the unemployment rate where is always some degree of unit churn with people moving in and out which in a city of millions represents thousands of units. The same way a 4-5% unemployment represents full employment at a healthy level while a 1% rate would be crisis level low. A similar percentage applies to housing vacancy. So there will never be a vacancy rate of 0% but this in no way suggests that there isn't a supply issue. Again, you can't judge that by absolute numbers (how many units exist or are being built). The only relevant way to use the numbers is to compare the units supplied with the units demanded. Any talk of the number of existing, u/c or planned units is useless without that.
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Originally Posted by WhipperSnapper
Housing for the sake of housing that doesn't provide desirable family housing and leaches on well established, desirable family neighbourhoods is going to be a negative on immigration whether its quality or quantity. For Canada's sake, hopefully it's quantity than quality. We simply can't afford to bring in 450,000 people a year that are less likely to contribute.
Intensifying suburban Scarborough one lot at a time won't make it less autocentric. Enough intensification of lots will contribute to traffic chaos. On these forums, traffic concerns are NIMBY quackery.
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That's also a mis-characterization of what I said. I never suggested there should be "housing for the sake of housing" without consideration for quality. Blending new growth into existing areas isn't "leeching" off them. It's just called growth. You see this is the problem with these discussions. At first it seems like people are just against a certain type of growth they find problematic, but it turns out they find an issue with any type of growth you can suggest. If it's all confined to separate highrise nodes then it isn't the right scale, the density is too high, it's sterile, etc., but when you suggest the better option of having it spread out and mixed with existing residential in a human scale then the new is "leeching" off the old. It's just finding various pejorative ways to characterize growth.
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Originally Posted by WhipperSnapper
There have been many single family conversions to multi-family in Toronto. It's no longer conceptual. There are some that did a good job. However, the majority resulted in overpriced cramped shoeboxes and none replaced the family home. It's not all additions. There's a subtraction involved and an important subtraction when the birthrate is at record lows.
Typically, any sort of irrational NIMBY concern gets dismissed in public consultation. Changes in response to public consultation almost always yields a better development. It's sad that these engaged community "NIMBYs" have often more insight on city planning than these forums. Here it's centred on number of people per square kilometre like more people per square kilometre will make a autocentric neighbourhood an urban walkable pleasantville and keeping up with Toronto and Vancouver on suburban skyscrapers
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My objection is not just what they say at public meetings. In fact I don't recall even mentioning public meetings. NIMBY concerns result in things like Premier Ford opposing the city's plan to allow 4-plexes as of right. They get anti-development people elected and those people make and change the rules which determine what is and isn't approved. And those officials are just obstructionists who do not have anything useful to offer the planning process.
But it's 100% that greater density doesn't make a place less autocentric. In fact, it doesn't make a place anything on its own other than more dense. It doesn't make it more or less pleasant, attractive, safe, interesting, or anything else. Changes can help to improve those things, can make them worse, or not effect them either way, Those things all come from how growth is done. That's reason I don't tend to discuss density at the same time as other aspects of planning. They're separate issues that warrant separate consideration.