Quote:
Originally Posted by LeftCoaster
And I'm curious what you think the residents/planners have done to stifle retail in this city?
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Compared to Singapore? I can come up with some ideas
Could lobby federal government to allow China UnionPay which has way better merchant fees than Visa/Mastercard Canada
Random obstructions on sidewalks and roads that result in unnecessary chokepoints
New roads and sidewalks are soon cut up and left with unprofessional uneven asphalt
Few and expensive cabs, banning Uber
More helipads would be fun
Rain is handled very poorly with large puddles on the ground and awnings that are both inconsistent and bad at accommodating store signage. Taxi stands are not sheltered
Should look at pedestrian overpasses and underpasses at wide, major roads (or an LA style trench highway), similar destinations should be very close in terms of travel time. Orchard Rd has very long blocks and you don't have to wait at a light to cross the road, unless it's a small sidestreet which is rare and the wait is short.
They rebate sales tax for visitors, and try to make it easy, but I don't think our PST does
Many longtime vacant lots and vacant storefronts that are not even taxed at the regular rate, resulting in higher land prices/higher rents/fewer location opportunities
In addition to publishing development plans, they might try to help consolidate space and attract large pools of capital to execute that vision. This last one I only add because much of downtown Vancouver today is defined by what Henry Reifel and the Bronfman trusts did, including Pacific Center. This probably isn't a problem today, but attention could move things along faster. If the International Village mall languishes, it is a waste for everyone and we should keep trying to make it work instead of ignoring it. More than a few developers near the DTES have been complaining about being deceived and how the current plan is effectively a development freeze that doesn't allow any improvement
If they wanted to think big, they could try and make the city/region a Free Trade Zone like Hong Kong. The closest cities to Vancouver are already so far by travel time (ferry trip, windy mountain roads, or an international border) that this might be something worth trying
Also, outside of Orchard Rd Singapore has cheaper storefronts. From old claustrophobic mazelike malls, to the standard rollup steel door fronting a sidewalk that is allowed to sell/service almost anything without apparent permit impediments. Even on Orchard Rd they have this split main floor style where you walk up or down half a flight of stairs which doubles the streetfront retail space. Cheap food if you're near a Hawkers market (like a bunch of mini granville islands, just selling food for cheap because the rent is free and amenities are spartan), you can open carry alcohol in public that can be sold anywhere. They may have the reputation of being very strict, but they don't bother to interfere in many areas if there are no problems.
and if you're bringing up luxury sales you can't bring up Hong Kong without Macau and Singapore without the Marina Bay casino which is something Vancouver city council has rejected a number of times over many years. We could easily do a floating LVHM next to a waterfront art gallery and science museum. Look how long it took for the seaplane terminal to be completed after the convention center, things in Singapore move fast.