Quote:
Originally Posted by T'Cona
This is where the city needs to push back, and ask them to come up with a better plan.
There is an opportunity here to achieve something greater. Want to attract a great mix of people, and create a unique neighborhood? Why not develop this to be similar to Nordhavn in Copenhagen? That, to me, would be very cool.
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Mostly philosophical, but does the city have the clout and land value like Copenhagen to push in that level of investment? Probably not.
If Winnipeg had the land value of Toronto or any major urban centre, that site would have been transformed the week after the Packers building came down. Yet much like Fulton Grove, and Sugar Beets, these spots are finally being developed because our land values
finally hit a point that developers will pay for the cost of rehabbing the ground from industrial use to residential.
Yes I hate the seas of parking lots but I can imagine that it's what the developers will make money from. Forcing more density with more underground parking will send that developer money to a greenfield and those parcels will sit generating peanuts in tax revenue for decades to come.
If someone want to build tall and dense I rather that money be spent on our many downtown surface lots.