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Originally Posted by Vin
(1) That's what I'm saying. Vancouver would never expand that far out if more areas within Vancouver were developed better and denser in the first place. We would probably already see a line serving all the way to UBC with major transit stations at Granville/Broadway, 4th Ave/Burrard, Kerrisdale, etc, way before the Canada Line was even conceived. West Broadway with all its development restrictions looks pretty much the same in the 90s as it is now, which is unheard of in a place with such high commercial and residential demand.
(2) What about between 2010 till now? Does your claim still hold true? Don't think so. The suburbs have seen unprecedented growths across the board in almost every municipality, when at the same time Vancouver area outside downtown only see tumble weeds rolling through the streets. Suburb municipalities are seeing many of their previous industrial and low-density neighbourhoods emerging as new town centres that did not exist previously. Examples are Sea Island Way neighbourhood in Richmond, Brentwood Town Centre, Burquitlam neighbourhood, Kingsgate/Edmonds neighbourhood, Brewery district in New West, UBC's Westbrook Village, etc etc..
(3) That, my friend, is again the failure of the local and provincial governments for not ensuring that enough affordable housing is built: the rush to put in higher condos resulted in sidelining the middle class when it comes to housing provision. Large scale rental and market lower-cost housing could've been built along and near major commercial streets like West Broadway, West 4th, Commercial/Broadway, etc. all these decades, but nothing seemed to be happening. Zoning restrictions and all the redtape only serve to drive developers further away. Slow gentrification measures and loose attitudes towards drug and crime in the DTES also stagnate the growth of downtown eastwards.
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So with higher zoning, Vancouver would never have filled out the downtown peninsula... but somehow would've filled out Broadway? And Christy's Liberals would've seen that growth and just given us the SkyTrain money without a referendum? The first is contradictory, the second is just ridiculous. Rather, what's happened is that Broadway has been growing as if it were a town centre, in spite of not having SkyTrain access.
The Olympics came along, Vancouver started getting tons of condo money, Burnaby and Surrey got envious and wanted in on the action; once Coquitlam got SkyTrain, so did they. Why does Vancouver need to join the race? We've already made it, we can grow at our own pace.
Same reason the developing world grows faster than the developed world. North America and Europe/Russia and East Asia have absolutely no reason to catch up to themselves.
Once again, you sound like 6 year old me playing SimCity 4: plopping down landmark towers and high-density zones until the money ran out, and then wondering why the "city" was rotting away. Unsustainable growth is how you get a Chinese ghost city.... or worse, Dubai.
- Without rental-only zoning and a government that gives a damn, high density in a free market means more condos and more demovictions.
- Without an adequate population size, retail either leeches customers from successful retail somewhere else, or just never takes off.
- Without a metro line (and a Premier that doesn't have a grudge against the city), the street doesn't support large amounts of people.
We only got all of those arranged in recent years.
Now we can zone for towers on Broadway.
As for gentrification, Chinatown and the DTES has plenty. What we need is more housing, more facilities, and a crackdown on the PRC gangs propagating fentanyl. A purely "tough on crime" approach was tried last century - all we ended up with was gangsta rap.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Vin
Not me: you are the one in denial with reality and keep defending an obsolete system that is failing to attract a lot more businesses into this city, and keep those who want to work close by to live here.
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Perhaps you should read this:
Toronto and Vancouver have plenty of room to grow up and more affordable
https://www.macleans.ca/opinion/toro...re-affordable/
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Er, we just landed an Amazon and Apple office. The ones finding it difficult are small businesses, and denser zoning hurts them even more.
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That's the Fraser Institute. BC's Heritage Foundation. The same kind of Victorian crony capitalism that got us into demovictions, foreign-owned condos and the housing crisis in the first place.
Once we reach Paris' population (or at least Los Angeles')
then we can start comparing ourselves to the big boys. Our league is Seattle and Chicago and Toronto, and in that regard we're already ahead of the curve.