Quote:
Originally Posted by Martin Mtl
All your exemples are about commercial streets, while I was more talking about residential streets lined with triplexes. In Le Plateau, boul. Saint-Joseph is the exception to the rules.
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Oh, residential streets. Well, in Montreal they probably appear narrower because they're lined with triplexes that come right up to the sidewalk while in Toronto they're lined by semi-detached homes with a small yard.
The actual width of the road right of way doesn't seem perceptibly different. In that sense, Toronto's residential streets aren't really wide at all. They're wider in just about any city in North America that was built during the same time period.
Also, the wideness of Toronto's streets might be an optical illusion since
in Montreal cars are allowed to park on both sides of the street, while
in Toronto they're usually only allowed to park on one.