Bingo. We have a winner! This isn't a London issue. It's a North America issue. The prize of land ownership with a private single family dwelling is cultural and ingrained... and it's going to take a lot more than the sort of persuasion used mostly unsuccessfully to date to change that.
Actually, there is more to it than that.....
Legally, there is little to stop a landowner who owns land within a designated development zone from subdividing. A municipality may try to shape and time how that development turns out, but stopping it all together is pretty hard. Something about landowner's rights....
Which means that the case for conversion from greenfield development to brownfield/redevelopment must be shown to be economically advantageous to the developer. This will only happen if the home-buying consumer changes their mindset and decides on say a place in a high rise or townhouse in the inner city as opposed to the white picket fence in the 'burbs. In London, this has begun in earnest, starting with mostly empty nesters and single professionals migrating back to the inner city. That said, the family folks in that 30 to 50 age bracket still want the privacy, quiet, space, and dare I say perceived security of the 'burbs to raise their kids. The question is how to convince them that moving to the inner city is a better alternative.
Lastly, there is the economic model. What young family wants to rent if avoidable? If not rent, why would anyone want to try to raise a family in a 1,200 sq.ft. condo that costs $350,000 + fees + parking? For the same price, you get your own castle, a back yard, and no condo fees.
Until that changes, the 'burbs will keep growing.
Quote:
Originally Posted by manny_santos
Not going to happen as long as focus groups keep telling developers they like these suburban disasters ("I like my quiet cul-de-sac", "I like driving 15 minutes to get groceries", "I like having a big backyard and I don't have to see my neighbours"), and the City continues to lack the balls to say "no" to developers who keep wanting to build these expansive low-density residential areas with no nearby commercial or industrial development (i.e. most of Byron). And London is by no means the only municipality in North America with this problem.
Problem is, too many suburban Canadians don't know what is good for them. A major flaw of the otherwise positive system of democracy.
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