Quote:
Originally Posted by highdensitysprawl
It did seem, for a new neighbourhood, to have a good density but I drove all the way along Blvd du Plateau and ended up on Blvd des Grives at Chemin Pink. It seemed a large area w/o anything but the stacked and walk ups. Are there any stores in the middle of it all.
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Most of the retail (say, 95%) is in the massive big box sprawl that spreads east along Boul. du Plateau from the corner of St-Raymond. There is a small building at the corner of Boul. des Grives and Rue de l'Atmosphère with a pharmacy, a few doctor's office and a small café. And there is a gas station/dépanneur combo at the corner of Pink and Boul. des Grives. So most of the neighbourhood (even where the denser stuff is) isn't really within walking distance of so much as a dépanneur.
Quote:
Originally Posted by highdensitysprawl
I can see the 2 target audiences you talk about.
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Yeah, Gatineau has a pretty good supply of young professionals just starting out their careers as the city is a magnet for university graduates from across Quebec. This demographic is also present in other cities I realize but the difference with Gatineau is that the downtown area (where many of these people would live in Ottawa, Montreal and Toronto) is generally not considered to be an attractive place to live by young professionals. Since they're not quite at the house-with-a-picket-fence stage of their lives, many of them end up in apartments, condos and townhomes in the Plateau, which is actually located quite close to downtown jobs, nightlife, shopping, etc.
Quote:
Originally Posted by highdensitysprawl
Definately a higher density mix than similar suburban n'hoods on the 613 side.
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I have noticed this as well. I posted this here almost a year to the day:
Just down the street from where I live, you have new 2500-sq.-ft. single-family homes with stone façades that sit about 100 m from $120,000 condos. Of course, all of this was built at the same time, so one could make the argument that people knew exactly what they were buying into.
But... if I look just a few streets over, the biggest houses in the neighbourhood (worth between $600,000 and $800,000, in Gatineau prices), are less than 100 m from a bunch of public, rent-to-income housing blocks (known in Quebec as HLMs). Now the HLMs were built quite a few years after the luxury houses, but when they were announced and built, not a peep was heard from the neighbours. And there wasn’t a flurry of “A VENDRE” (FOR SALE) signs either.
Although things are densifying a little in the Ottawa suburbs as well. You should check out parts of Orleans south of Innes and east of Tenth Line.