Quote:
Originally Posted by MolsonExport
No doubt QC has a stunning location, and looks great due to its historical structures. Amazing urban fabric as well. Nobody goes there for the skyscrapers (although Edifice Price is very nice).
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I am a resident of Quebec City and a real estate developer.....
I'm used to working with great restrictions in my projects.
Here, the downtown area is preserved from skyscrapers because heritage prevails.
This has favored development elsewhere than downtown, in Ste-Foy, Lebourgneuf and Lévis.
What's more, the city's steep slopes camouflage many of the buildings in the St-Roch sector, for example.
But the city is beginning to open up, because the need for housing is great, and it has just authorized the construction of two new 20- and 21-storey projects in the city center. Something that hasn't happened for a very long time.
Quebec City doesn't develop like other cities and likes it that way...
It's that little touch of diversity, a plus for everyone because it's different.
I like Toronto for its dinamism, Calgary for its mountains and skyscrapers, Victoria for its development on a human scale near the sea, Halifax for its progressive spirit with its big-city areas, even if it remains on a human scale. Kelowan, growing fast on the edge of a lake.
Every place is different, and that's fine.