Quote:
Originally Posted by goodgrowth
Given the housing situation it's basically negligent/incompetent of the federal government to not require density near transit routes that are costing billions of dollars. This is literally where they could exert influence over local zoning.
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You seriously think Justin Trudeau from Montreal and his transport minister from Mississauga should dictate what is the appropriate density from the King Street corridor in Hamilton?
1 King and 10 Beeline carried 20,107 passengers per weekday in 2016 and they currently operate at a combined 4.5 minute frequency during weekday rush hour. So chances are that low density is not a problem in Hamilton, especially along the King Street corridor. That is all the federal government needs to know, nothing else.
As for lack of density being the cause of high housing costs, the urban agglomeration that is Toronto-Hamilton-Oshawa has an urban density of 2797.48/sqkm, the highest in Canada and US, on par with European urban areas such as Berlin and Lisbon. Density is not the problem here. You can build thousands of high-rise apartment buildings in suburban GTA and it won't solve the problem (hint: the suburban GTA already has thousands of high-rise apartment buildings).
That's the problem with people associating the "rapid transit" with increased speed instead of increased capacity. For Hamilton's LRT and the other GTA projects like Ontario Line, Eglinton LRT, Scarborough Subway, it's a matter of increased capacity, not increased speed. To use these projects and the overcrowded transit corridors they are meant to relieve as an opportunity to highlight and criticize a lack of density in the GTA and Hamilton is just ridiculous.