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Originally Posted by privatejet
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If a tall building does succeed in going ahead, I hope it enhances the curve on Haro Street. The curves on Melville and Haro Streets add a "flair" to d/t and take away that monotonous grid feeling.
Quote:
Originally Posted by phesto
Apparently the site is limited to about 200 feet in height as the City will not allow shadows on the North side of Robson Street.
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That's idiotically contradictory.
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Originally Posted by Prometheus
Either way, the city has imposed one of its viewcone limitations over this downtown site, artificially arresting new building heights at 250 feet. If the shadowing limitation is true as well, that would mean the city would have to contradict not one but two of its development-restricting policies, if a building of 550 feet was to move forward.
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All this would be funny enough for a situation comedy about a ficticious, wacky city ... if it weren't so pathetically stupid.
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Originally Posted by Vin
The City wants to turn most of the high-density districts outside downtown, such as O.V. to 10-12 storey blocks of condos with narrow streets, ie. shadows abound, and here they are anal about narrow high-rise shadowing which would not even last throughout the whole day?
A little shadow in the day helps to cool down buildings in the middle of summer. A good thing I'd say.
This City should stop being anal about nonsensical policies that keep hampering decent developments.
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One sure way is to fire the crew of idiots. That being out of the question, maybe electroshock would do it. That being out of the question, mass street riots might. That being out of the question, the only solution is to petitition until you have writer's cramps, and if that doesn't work ... live with their idiotic, dumbing-down solutions.