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Originally Posted by jemartin
Hard to quantify less desirable. Examples are intensification of older structures, converting tenant buildings to condos, converting large home lots to mutli condo lots, there are any number of intensification projects around the Glebe.
The big difference is that they are private developments on private land, not public park (meeting place) land.
It is a question that raises many issues, such as should you proceed with sole sourcing such massive contracts, should the City be a developer of private homes/retail/office, what is the value of public space to the quality of life of the city dwellers, the preservation of heritage and culture, the list goes on.
All of these issues have been raised due to not following basic procurement of competitive bidding, of not following the Master Plan detailing intensification should take place adjacent to LeBreton and rapid transit and by allowing the developers rather than the City to direct growth.
What is less painful? Seeing this plan through and cut a heritage site in two, or developing on a vacant fenced off lot at Bayview already zoned for exactly this type of development tied mix, on rapid transit and fulfilling the Master Plan objectives?
The second option can expand with 5 to 10 times the development space at Bayview/Lebreton and you would decrease the dependence on cars.
The same cannot be said for Lansdowne.
Greater development space at Bayview means greater developer return and greater taxation return for the city with fewer associated costs of underground parking garages, building a new trade show structure, and paying exorbitant amounts for landscaping.
The grief all this is causing has all come about not due to intensification but rather trying to do it in the wrong spot.
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It is great to speak in generalities, but you and I both know that there has been no significant intensification in the Glebe to speak of in the past 10 years, outside of a couple of small condo buildings on Bank St. In fact, the trend has been towards de-intensification, as the apartment buildings that have burned recently have tended to be replaced with larger houses or townhouses containing fewer, not more units.
In my experience, there is very little appetite for intensification in the Glebe. The arguments being trotted out against Lansdowne Live (traffic, delivery trucks, building height, character of the neighbourhood) are the same old tired arguments that are used against any significant infill project anywhere. I am quite sure that if someone proposed this same type of project on private land in the Glebe, the level of grief would be similar. For proof of that, look at the outcry caused by a noisy air conditioner on a senior's residence. Or the fight that blocked a new pub on Bank St. (If you can't put a pub on Bank, where can you put it?) This is not a neighbourhood that is generally open-minded to new development.
Further, the idea that publicly-owned land should not be used for intensification purposes is simply incorrect. In fact, a huge number of major infill projects around the country were/are to be built on public land. Disused or underutilized public land (and especially land on designated main streets) is instrumental in achieving intensification goals.
As was pointed out before, it is not a question of either Lansdowne or Bayview. It should be both.