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Tag Archives: greenhouse gas emissions

Vertical development: A dense idea

It turns out cram­ming more peo­ple into cities won’t help the envi­ron­ment or our health, and may even hurt the economy

Tam­sin McMa­hon – Macleans

Last month Toronto’s deputy mayor, Doug Holy­day, uttered what has become a cul­tural taboo in Canada’s largest city. Down­town Toronto, he said, is no place to raise a family.

Holy­day, who lives down the street from his grand­chil­dren in the sub­ur­ban Toronto neigh­bour­hood of Eto­bi­coke, was against a city plan to force condo devel­op­ers to reserve 10% of their build­ings for three-bedroom “fam­ily friendly” units.

I could just see now: ‘Where’s lit­tle Ginny?’ ” he said. “She’s down­stairs play­ing in the traf­fic on her way to the park.”

His com­ments were swiftly denounced by Adam Vaughan, the down­town coun­cil­lor who had been push­ing for the family-friendly condo units and once proudly told a reporter he had never vis­ited the sub­urbs around Toronto. (“There’s Toronto and there’s the rest of Canada,” he said.)

Holyday’s view was hardly orig­i­nal, but was so shock­ing because of how it flew in the face of what has become accepted wis­dom in cities across the coun­try: we need to rad­i­cally increase the num­ber of peo­ple liv­ing in the down­town core if we’re going to accom­mo­date pop­u­la­tion growth while end­ing urban sprawl.

The doc­trine of urban inten­si­fi­ca­tion is already hav­ing a dra­matic effect on the condo-lined sky­lines of cities like Toronto and Van­cou­ver, but the debate has been play­ing out across the coun­try with com­mu­ni­ties as dis­parate as Miramichi, N.B., Saska­toon and Cal­gary all wring­ing their hands about how to stop the relent­less march to the suburbs.

In July, Rev­el­stoke, B.C., passed a law requir­ing the city to cut green­house gas emis­sions by 15% by 2030, in part by encour­ag­ing high-density development.

Saska­toon is plan­ning to turn a for­mer dog park in a low-density neigh­bour­hood of Sec­ond World War hous­ing into nine apart­ment build­ings. The city also has plans to rede­velop 97 hectares of indus­trial land in the north down­town into a mixed-use devel­op­ment that could house 6,000 peo­ple and five mil­lion square feet of retail and com­mer­cial space. Some argued the city didn’t go far enough, with coun­cil­lor Myles Heidt telling the Saska­toon Star-Phoenix the devel­op­ment should strive for “extra-high den­sity” capa­ble of hous­ing up to 30,000 peo­ple, or nearly 13% of the city’s cur­rent population.

Miramichi’s new devel­op­ment plan calls for more multi-unit hous­ing. Cal­gary, con­sid­ered the epit­ome of the Cana­dian car-centric city, recently hired an urban plan­ner whose per­sonal motto is: “No place is worth vis­it­ing that doesn’t have a park­ing problem.”

After decades of watch­ing North Amer­i­can cities gut­ted by res­i­dents flee­ing to the leafy sub­urbs, urban enthu­si­asts are now declar­ing an end to low-density development.

In the eyes of many city plan­ners and polit­i­cal lead­ers, the sub­ur­ban ideal of the single-detached house on a quiet cul-de-sac, com­plete with a large yard and the req­ui­site lengthy com­mute, is a relic of a bygone and largely unsus­tain­able era. In its place, they are push­ing for “smart growth” com­mu­ni­ties fea­tur­ing high-density housing-usually in the form of apart­ment and condo complexes-in mixed-use neigh­bour­hoods where every­one walks, bikes or takes the bus. It’s the only way, we’re told, to han­dle our rapid pop­u­la­tion growth with­out destroy­ing the envi­ron­ment and clog­ging streets with traffic.

Urban plan­ners have been hotly debat­ing how to cope with sprawl-or whether we even need to cope with it at all-for decades. But the smart-growth move­ment has picked up steam over the past decade as envi­ron­men­tal­ists con­cerned about global warm­ing pointed the fin­ger squarely at the sub­ur­ban com­muter for con­tribut­ing to cli­mate change.

But a grow­ing body of crit­ics is argu­ing that far from rais­ing our qual­ity of liv­ing, green­ing our envi­ron­ment and mak­ing us all walk more and drive less, the kind of rad­i­cal inten­si­fi­ca­tion plans now in vogue with urban plan­ners are dam­ag­ing our economies, rais­ing our cost of liv­ing and fail­ing to get peo­ple out of their cars and onto pub­lic tran­sit. What we need, they say, is a much more thought­ful debate over how to live beyond the push to cram more peo­ple into ever-smaller spaces.

The whole dia­logue on den­sity is too focused on num­bers rather than being focused on what den­sity can actu­ally offer,” says Pierre Fil­ion, an urban plan­ner at the Uni­ver­sity of Water­loo. “What is impor­tant is, what kind of envi­ron­ment are you going to cre­ate? This is as much, if not even more impor­tant than grow­ing density.”

The con­cept of smart growth, with its belief in densely pop­u­lated mixed-use neigh­bour­hoods, has long been linked to the ideas of Jane Jacobs, the Amer­i­can urban plan­ner whose The Death and Life of Great Amer­i­can Cities called for a return to a live­able urban com­mu­nity. But Jacobs decried neigh­bour­hoods full of high-rise build­ings and wor­ried that den­sity, if left unchecked, could “begin to repress diver­sity instead of stim­u­late it.” Instead, urban plan­ning his­to­ri­ans point out that the modern-day smart-growth move­ment looks much more like the ideas of George Dantzig and Thomas Saaty, two Amer­i­can math­e­mati­cians who in 1973 devel­oped a series of com­puter mod­els for the ideal urban set­ting, which they termed the “com­pact city.”

Effec­tive use of the ver­ti­cal dimen­sion,” they argued, could solve a host of prob­lems fac­ing the growth city, among them: “smog, traf­fic, time lost in com­mut­ing, acci­dents, slums, noise, pol­lu­tion, inac­ces­si­ble nature, unsafe walks and play areas, end­less chauf­feur­ing of chil­dren and ris­ing cost.”

Our claim,” they wrote, “is that it is now cheaper to build land than to go out and rob nature.”

Dantzig and Saaty’s belief that dras­ti­cally increas­ing the pop­u­la­tion den­sity of our cities was the only way to solve a host of envi­ron­men­tal prob­lems has become a cen­tral tenet of the modern-day smart-growth move­ment. Sup­port­ers argue that build­ing up our cities and sub­urbs will cut down on green­house gas emis­sions by short­en­ing our com­mutes and encour­ag­ing more of us to take pub­lic tran­sit to work or walk.

It would be nice to think that sim­ply hav­ing more peo­ple live close together down­town would make peo­ple, par­tic­u­larly chil­dren, health­ier. Less time spent in cars, the think­ing goes, means more time walk­ing to nearby gro­cery stores, play­grounds and schools. But when researchers from the Uni­ver­sity of South­ern Cal­i­for­nia, North­east­ern Uni­ver­sity, and Berke­ley tracked the phys­i­cal activ­ity of chil­dren aged nine to 11 who had moved to smart-growth com­mu­ni­ties and com­pared them with chil­dren in tra­di­tional sub­urbs, they found lit­tle evi­dence of a great shift. Chil­dren in smart-growth com­mu­ni­ties tended to play more out­doors, usu­ally in their neigh­bour­hood, while chil­dren in the sub­urbs played more indoors, the study found. But it con­cluded that “increases in daily moderate-to-vigorous phys­i­cal activ­ity did not sig­nif­i­cantly dif­fer by group.” In other words, chil­dren who moved to smart-growth com­mu­ni­ties changed where they played, but not how much.

Another study out of the Uni­ver­sity of South­ern Cal­i­for­nia exam­ined the core prin­ci­ples of smart growth to see whether any of them actu­ally had any influ­ence on rates of phys­i­cal activ­ity. The only ones that did, they found, were poli­cies pro­mot­ing more open space and those that advo­cated for “dis­tinc­tive com­mu­ni­ties with a strong sense of place,” nei­ther of which are par­tic­u­larly linked to density.

Aside from fail­ing to make us any health­ier, there’s mount­ing evi­dence that smart growth doesn’t live up to the hype when it comes to improv­ing the phys­i­cal state of the envi­ron­ment, either.

A 2009 study from the Geor­gia Insti­tute of Tech­nol­ogy and the Uni­ver­sity of Wisconsin-Madison mod­elled what smart-growth devel­op­ment would do to green­house gas emis­sions by 2050 and found that “aggres­sive” smart growth that included rad­i­cal inten­si­fi­ca­tion could reduce car­bon emis­sions by eight%. On the other hand, forc­ing every­one to drive hybrid vehi­cles, even if on lengthy com­mutes to the burbs, could cut emis­sions by 18%.

Researchers found increas­ing pop­u­la­tion den­sity has not been suc­cess­ful at get­ting peo­ple out of their cars and onto pub­lic tran­sit. That’s because pop­u­la­tion den­sity has lit­tle to do with how peo­ple choose to get to work and almost no asso­ci­a­tion with lev­els of pub­lic tran­sit ridership.

By the sim­ple mea­sure of res­i­dents per hectare, Los Ange­les is North America’s most densely pop­u­lated met­ro­pol­i­tan region, with 27.3 peo­ple per hectare, thanks to its com­pact sub­urbs all con­nected by a net­work of free­ways. Yet more than 90% of its pop­u­la­tion mainly trav­els by car and less than five% by pub­lic tran­sit. That com­pares to Edmon­ton, which houses just 10.1 peo­ple per hectare, but has nearly dou­ble the pro­por­tion of res­i­dents who take tran­sit. Even in Port­land, Ore., a city fre­quently touted by Cana­dian urban plan­ners as the gold stan­dard for smart growth because of its mas­sive invest­ments in light-rail tran­sit and down­town rede­vel­op­ment, 89.4% of res­i­dents still pre­fer to drive to work. In Cal­gary, it’s 76.6%.

I don’t think den­sity has very much to do with the suc­cess of pub­lic tran­sit,” says Paul Mees, a trans­porta­tion plan­ning pro­fes­sor at Royal Mel­bourne Insti­tute of Tech­nol­ogy in Aus­tralia. “I think that’s the urban myth that is really hold­ing back progress.”

That idea, that cities need to be jam-packed with peo­ple in order for tran­sit to be viable, first emerged in the 1950s as a way to advo­cate for more spend­ing on roads and high­ways, says Mees. A Chicago trans­porta­tion study at that time deter­mined the region would need 96.5 res­i­dents per hectare (more than three times the pop­u­la­tion den­sity of present-day Toronto) to sup­port pub­lic tran­sit to its sub­urbs, a cal­cu­la­tion that con­tin­ues to hold sway over city plan­ners today. Instead, Mees argues the actual den­sity needed to pro­vide sus­tain­able pub­lic tran­sit is prob­a­bly closer to one where most peo­ple live on lots of 647 sq. m with a well-defined urban bound­ary to keep houses from sprawl­ing ran­domly into the coun­try­side. In other words, tra­di­tional sub­ur­bia. “That seems to be almost all of Canada,” he says.

While Toronto’s city coun­cil was engulfed in a debate over the need for more family-friendly, three-bedroom con­dos in the city’s down­town, the Toronto Real Estate Board released a report that said just 19 three-bedroom con­dos were sold in the down­town core in the sec­ond quar­ter of the year. The con­dos aver­aged around $800,000, hardly a family-friendly price tag.

Real estate prices inevitably rise in tan­dem with pop­u­la­tion density-one of the main rea­sons, smart-growth crit­ics say, that poli­cies to stop sprawl by increas­ing den­sity in our cities and sub­urbs are des­tined to fail. The more peo­ple you try to cram into a city, the more expen­sive real estate gets, and the more peo­ple are inclined to flee to the sub­urbs for more afford­able hous­ing. In fact, a study released in May from Cam­bridge Uni­ver­sity in the U.K. found that dra­mat­i­cally increas­ing urban den­sity might reduce car use by a mere five%, but the envi­ron­men­tal gains from that reduc­tion would be dwarfed by the eco­nomic con­se­quences of mak­ing cities more expen­sive places to live and do busi­ness. “Any econ­o­mist will know when you restrict the sup­ply of a good that is in demand, you drive up the cost,” says Wen­dell Cox of the U.S. urban pol­icy con­sul­tancy Demographia and a vocal critic of the push for urban inten­si­fi­ca­tion. “If we can fig­ure out a way to do smart growth with­out rationing land, it might be a good idea.”

It’s not only fam­i­lies who have been flee­ing to the sub­urbs as land prices in the city sky­rocket, jobs have also migrated, lead­ing to what’s been dubbed “job sprawl.”

For instance, down­town Toronto is no longer the region’s largest employer, says Cox. More than 350,000 peo­ple work in the sprawl­ing area around Pear­son air­port, com­pared to 325,000 in down­town Toronto. Between 2001 and 2006, 94% of new jobs in the Toronto area were out­side of the cen­tral munic­i­pal­ity, he says, with rates of 70% in Mon­treal and 75% in Van­cou­ver. And as jobs have moved out of cities, down­town res­i­dents have fol­lowed them, lead­ing to the increas­ingly com­mon phe­nom­e­non of the “reverse com­mute,” where res­i­dents leave their homes in the city to drive to work in the sub­urbs. Nearly a third of the com­muter traf­fic in and out of Toronto as of 2006 involved city res­i­dents head­ing to jobs in the sub­urbs. Almost as many Toron­to­ni­ans com­muted to Vaughan, a sub­urb north of the city, as com­muted from Vaughan into the city. In Van­cou­ver in 2006, more than 40% of com­muter traf­fic was doing a reverse com­mute; in Mon­treal it was 23%.

Lisa Anttila is one of those reverse com­muters. She lives in down­town Toronto, where she bikes to the gro­cery store and the doctor’s office. But she gets in the car to go to work at her family’s busi­ness man­u­fac­tur­ing stain­less steel prod­ucts in Markham, a sub­urb north of the city. Most days her work sched­ule is flex­i­ble enough that she can time the com­mute to avoid traf­fic, but that has become more dif­fi­cult in the six years she’s been doing the drive. “It used to be, ‘Don’t get on the road between 7:30 a.m. and 9:30 a.m.’ Now it’s like if you haven’t left by 7:30 then you’re pretty much wait­ing until after 10,” she says. “Iron­i­cally it seems like half the peo­ple who live [in Markham] come to Toronto to work and so they fill the jobs with peo­ple from Toronto.”

At its worst, Anttila’s 18-km reverse com­mute can now take nearly 90 min­utes by car. Pub­lic tran­sit, she says, is not an option. “It takes me longer on pub­lic tran­sit than it does by bicy­cle,” she says.

Smart-growth devel­op­ment is unlikely to reverse that trend. Researchers from East Car­olina Uni­ver­sity stud­ied what hap­pened to jobs in 350 U.S. met­ro­pol­i­tan regions between 2001 and 2006, com­par­ing those that had restric­tions on sprawl with those that didn’t.

Eight of the 11 cities with anti-sprawl laws had “job sprawl” rates that were worse than the aver­age. Bend, Ore., a city that under­went mas­sive mixed-use rede­vel­op­ment before being slammed by the finan­cial melt­down, fared four times worse than the national aver­age. Mean­while, some low-density cities in Texas, Ten­nessee and South Car­olina had actu­ally man­aged to attract more jobs than they lost to the suburbs.

The fact that more den­sity can’t deliver a bet­ter com­mute to work and can even make con­ges­tion worse, is one of the biggest eco­nomic argu­ments against urban inten­si­fi­ca­tion, Cox says. “The only rea­son peo­ple move to cities is to do bet­ter because the oppor­tu­ni­ties in cities are bet­ter,” he says. “If peo­ple don’t begin to real­ize what they’re doing to really nice cities, you could very well in the long run see growth pushed out of them.”

Those munic­i­pal­i­ties that do embrace smart growth have been doing it at the expense of indus­trial devel­op­ment, pre­fer­ring to con­vert fac­tory zones into areas for hous­ing. And that is doing last­ing dam­age to the abil­ity of cities to cre­ate enough jobs for their fast-growing pop­u­la­tions, says Nancey Green Leigh, a brown­field rede­vel­op­ment expert with Geor­gia Tech Uni­ver­sity. She stud­ied the indus­trial devel­op­ment poli­cies of 14 major U.S. cities and 10 smart-growth regions and found smart-growth plan­ning either ignored the needs of indus­try or saw it as a blight on the urban land­scape. Man­u­fac­tur­ing jobs were van­ish­ing from North Amer­i­can cities long before the advent of smart growth. But Green Leigh says the push for urban inten­si­fi­ca­tion has aggra­vated that trend. Once old indus­trial land gets con­verted to con­do­mini­ums, it’s never long before new condo dwellers begin to demand that any remain­ing man­u­fac­tur­ers and fac­to­ries be given the boot.

The loss of indus­trial land to con­dos, offices and retail com­plexes has become a prob­lem in B.C.’s Lower Main­land, where the port author­ity has run up against stiff oppo­si­tion to its plans to buy prop­er­ties for future indus­trial uses. Port Metro Van­cou­ver has recently pur­chased 142 hectares of land in the Lower Main­land to safe­guard for indus­trial use. But, CEO Robin Sil­vester says, provin­cial esti­mates point to the need for as many as 809 hectares of indus­trial land if the region is to stay eco­nom­i­cally com­pet­i­tive and avoid becom­ing a res­i­den­tial oasis for the wealthy and retired. And that has put the port on a col­li­sion course with those who believe the areas should be reserved for more urban liv­ing. “We need to have a bet­ter qual­ity of dis­cus­sion around the prob­lem that’s emerg­ing,” Sil­vester says. “Oth­er­wise we run the risk of becom­ing like com­mu­ni­ties in parts of Florida where a lot of peo­ple go to live, but where there’s no eco­nomic activ­ity tak­ing place.”

Van­cou­ver is per­haps Canada’s stark­est exam­ple of what hap­pens to real estate when a city becomes a place where every­one wants to live. But urban plan­ners across the coun­try are sin­gu­larly focused on end­ing sprawl. The irony is that the cur­rent obses­sion with smart growth may just become one more thing that pushes us, our fam­i­lies and our jobs, even far­ther into the burbs.

—————————————————————————————————–
Con­tact the Jef­frey Team for more infor­ma­tion – 416−388−1960

Lau­rin & Natalie Jef­frey are Toronto Real­tors with Cen­tury 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these arti­cles, they just repro­duce them here for peo­ple
who are inter­ested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

—————————————————————————————————–


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  • Greening condos really pays off

    Ian Harvey – Toronto Star

    Building green condominiums from the ground up could cut natural gas costs by 50%, a long-term experiment with two nearly identical Tridel buildings in Etobicoke has discovered.

    Based on these results and other studies in progress, the condo of the not-so-distant future may become so energy efficient that it may not need to hook up to a natural gas supply, slashing costs.

    The results are spectacular and now provide a baseline for all developers to move forward with more innovative designs, which will serve buyers’ demands and set the standard for energy conservation in highrise buildings.

    The pair of Etobicoke buildings in the study were on the boards around 2004 and were to be completed in 2006 and 2008.

    One however, was fitted with a slew of energy-efficient features and built to the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Silver standard, along with sensors to monitor energy use. The other building was completed to meet design standards of the day.

    Three years after occupancy, two years of data from the buildings were analyzed and compared.

    The experiment came about when the perfect convergence of interest, curiosity and funding allowed a partnership of Tridel, the city’s Toronto Atmospheric Fund and a start-up venture, TowerLabs, to investigate an apples-to-apples comparison of energy consumption in almost identical buildings at the same location.

    It was a rare opportunity to get real data in real time, since such calculations are usually estimates based on theoretical models.

    The tale of the tape showed that in the upgraded building there was a 50% decrease in natural gas use, a 6% drop in electricity and a reduction of 550 tonnes in annual greenhouse gas emissions compared with the standard building.

    In hard dollars, that’s a $125,000-a-year saving, said Jamie James, president of TowerLabs, noting the savings are crucial to winning both developer and buyer acceptance.

    “This is a constant process for us and why we are involved with TowerLabs,” says Jim Ritchie, Tridel’s vice-president of marketing and sales. “The feedback we get from all these things allows us to learn a little bit more and move forward with design on all our products.”

    Tridel agreed to the project because the extra cost would be financed through the city’s Green Condo Loan of about $500,000, which the assuming condo corporation took over and is paying off through energy savings. The study found that the loan will be paid back by the energy savings in about seven years.

    The financing was integral to the project because it removed the risk from the equation for Tridel, but more importantly the industry now has a set of hard numbers to prove the benefits of energy-efficient design.

    Ritchie said the lessons from this and other projects will allow Tridel to tailor building design much more effectively. It knows, for example, that the added cost of higher-efficiency boilers and individual energy-recovery ventilation systems in each unit translates directly into lower energy costs for homeowners and savings over the long run.

    Since the condos were built, James said, the city has introduced the Toronto Green Standard (TGS), which means all towers must meet the efficiency standards of the building in the study.

    The quest now is to push the envelope further, says Bryan Purcell, manager for incubation and social innovation at the Toronto Atmospheric Fund.

    “There is a building under construction now that has no gas connection at all,” Purcell said. Instead it will use geothermal energy, literally extracting heat from the ground below in winter and drawing its cooling power in summer.

    The hope, he said, is to create buildings at least 25% to 35% more efficient than demanded by the current code.

    Other innovations including advanced building design and management software, which can predict a building’s energy consumption according to how it is oriented to the sun’s path and its exposure to wind.

    —————————————————————————————————–
    Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416-388-1960

    Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
    They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
    who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

    —————————————————————————————————–

    Builders say new standards will drive up prices

    Jane Gadd – Globe and Mail

    Ontario builders say that tougher insulation standards unveiled in the province’s new building code will add between $10,000 and $15,000 to the average cost of a new home in the next six years.

    “The energy-efficiency targets set out by the government for 2012 represent a monumental shift for our industry,” Victor Fiume, president of the Ontario Home Builders Association, said in a statement. “This will seriously affect affordability of housing in the future.”

    The province’s new building code calls for the staggered implementation of a 29-per-cent increase in ceiling insulation levels, a 50% improvement in basement wall insulation, windows that are 67% more airtight, and a minimum energy-efficiency rating of 90% for new furnaces.

    The government says the new standards will save enough energy to power 380,000 homes in the next eight years, and will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by an amount equal to removing 250,000 cars from Ontario’s roads. Homeowners will be able to recoup the added costs through savings on gas and hydro bills, it adds.

    “Conservation is a fundamental and key component of our energy plan for Ontario,” Energy Minister Dwight Duncan said. “The 2006 Building Code will enable future homeowners to enjoy long-term energy savings and at the same time reduce Ontario’s overall energy use.”

    But Mr. Fiume described the changes as one more factor pushing up real estate prices.

    “As an association, we are always concerned with the affordability of new homes for consumers,” he said. “With escalating new and resale house prices, rising interest rates, escalating development charges and increased cost of materials — and now the addition of costs related to the implementation of the new [code] — housing affordability will continue to be a challenge for Ontarians."

    The new code also requires more accessibility for people with disabilities in buildings constructed from now on. Public corridors will have to be wide enough to accommodate modern wheelchairs, tactile signs will have to be provided for the visually impaired, and 10% of units in any new apartment buildings and hotels must include accessibility features.

    "This change will increase flexibility and choice for hundreds of people with a developmental disability who are in need of supportive housing," said Geoffrey McMullen, chairman of the Provincial Network on Developmental Services.

    The Canadian National Institute for the Blind also expressed approval.

    "People with disabilities make an enormous contribution to our communities," CNIB director Dennis Tottenham said. "We are pleased with the government's progress in making Ontario accessible to all."

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    Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information  -  416-388-1960

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