Quote:
Originally Posted by Tvisforme
Conceptually speaking, there's merit in your idea. However, in this particular situation, the redevelopment of one building won't be enough to address issues caused by a very compact multi-use space. Road access to the area is significantly limited by the pedestrian-oriented lower portion of Lonsdale Avenue and Carrie Cates Court, not to mention the railway tunnel emerging at Chesterfield. The waterfront pedestrian cross-traffic still has to go somewhere; if you move the bus loop closer to the SeaBus terminal, those people will have to cross transit roads instead of sidewalks. You could potentially move the buses out of the way by elevating the loop - with access from Esplanade instead of Carrie Cates - but then you need stairs and escalators to get down to the SeaBus. Another solution might be adding a pedestrian underpass - similar to the one further west on the Spirit Trail - for cross-traffic.
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My plan is contingent upon the redevelopment of the 2 smaller buildings nestled between the seabus terminal and the ICBC building, then you could build a new bus loop where the 2 smaller buildings were, plus some. That's a more seamless integration of the 2 modes.
The former bus loop area could then become a retail area to expand the already existing Lonsdale Quay retail space. This would activate Esplanade, as it would bring a plaza and retail right to the street. There is just a blank wall there now
People exiting the seabus terminal, if they are not transferring to a bus, would only need cross a bus loop street, then enter a pleasant underground retail area to get Esplanade. Buses can enter from Chesterfield/Chadwick.
What I'm proposing is minor in the context of this huge project.