Quote:
Originally Posted by s211
Also, instead of moving the contaminated fill off-site when they excavate for tower construction, they want to pile the fill on the parklands!
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Both David Lam Park and Andy Livingstone Park are repositories for comtaminated soil - it was too expensive to move such large volumes of soil offsite (to Swan Hills in Alberta the closest hazardous waste disposal facility) so it is managed
in situ. There is an undergound barrier in place to prevent contaminated groundwater from leaching into False Creek near the current presentation centre location - the blue building next to the SkyTrain tracks is a pumping station that pumps the contaminated water into the municipal sewage system for treatment.
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There's no guarantee of views anywhere.
Even if a site is an existing park (let alone a
planned park), there's no guarantee it will remain a park forever.
For example, a massive new community centre was built in Sunset Park on Main Street. The Olympic curling facility was built in Hillcrest Park. The City may be reconsidering building the park at Richards & Smithe since Yaletown Park's park is a couple blocks away.
As for the CityGate residents - they've bought in an "up and coming" area. The park that was delivered in conjunction with the CityGate projects has been delivered - it's next to Science World. The "expansion" of that park is unrelated to their development, even if it is planned for the area.
Concord Pacific could sell the property and then you'd be back to square one with what a new developer wants to negotiate with the City.
Personally, I think that residential buildings (towers or otherwise) along Pacific Boulevard near the viaducts would do well to "connect" CityGate to the rest of the city.