Tag Archives: neighbourhoods
Art flourishes in old buildings, while chains hold condo neighbourhoods in bondage
The franchise economy and condo culture combine to create a sameness on our city streets.
Christopher Hume – Toronto Star
One of the most interesting shows in Toronto right now is on display in one of the most interesting neighbourhoods in Toronto right now.
The exhibition in question is a fascinating collection of photographs of the Model Operas performed in China under the patronage of Jiang Qing, the notorious Madame Mao. Shot by Zhang Yaxin in the 1960s and ’70s, the pictures can be seen at the Stephen Bulger Gallery on Queen Street west of Ossington,
Housed in a late 19th-century hardware store across the road from the newly rebuilt campus of CAMH (Centre for Addiction and Mental Health), the gallery is part of small complex designed, brilliantly, by Toronto architect Siamak Hariri in 2004.
Back then, this was not the sort of place you’d expect to find an art gallery. But the Drake Hotel had just reopened blocks away, followed by the Gladstone, and West Queen West was suddenly one the city’s newly cool neighbourhoods.
Nearly a decade later, it still is. Unlike Queen West, which emerged as a cultural/commercial hotspot in the late 1970s and early ’80s, West Queen West remains relatively unspoiled. The franchised forces of urban homogeneity – Shoppers Drug Mart, Tim Hortons, Subway and so on – have yet to make their deadening presence felt.
They will, of course, as inevitably they must. And as Toronto’s streets are taken over by the officially sanctioned mixed-use condo complex – commercial at grade, residential above – this process of retail sterilization has reached into almost corner of the city.
“The city wants commercial at grade, in all buildings,” says Toronto-Danforth Councillor Paula Fletcher. “That’s basically a requirement in mixed-use areas – you want commercial on main avenues, and above it, residential. That’s the street pattern that exists.”
That’s the theory, and it’s a good one, even if it doesn’t always achieve the intended purpose. Recently, for example, the owners of the Real Jerk on Queen St. E. thought they had found a new location for their landmark eatery in the ground floor of a condo a few blocks west of the original site (an old bank) at Broadview Ave. But then residents said no; they didn’t want a restaurant serving food and alcohol in their building, thank you very much; bad for sleeping and property values.
These condo towers, each one a NIMBY fortress, speed the deadening effects of globalization and corporate hegemony. Years ago in an interview with the Star, a Queen St. W. landlord, who had turned out a popular yoga studio in favour of a national coffee-and-doughnut outlet, claimed that he had no choice: The banks, he explained, liked big chains they’d heard of, not small ones that haven’t.
As these trends play out, Toronto is fast becoming a shopping desert, a retail wasteland where only heavily advertised global brands are on offer.
“New ideas,” Jane Jacobs famously opined, “need old buildings.”
What happens when the supply of old buildings runs out? Before that occurs, the search will have moved beyond the traditional city core. One day, the Stephen Bulgers will have moved to Hamilton or, perhaps, operate out of strip malls in Scarborough and North York where space is available, rent low and parking plentiful.
That’s hard to imagine, but so was Queen St. W. once upon a time, not to mention Ossington, DuWest (Dundas St. W.), St. Clair Ave. W., Lansdowne … . Sadly, though, distances and differences in built form will be hard to overcome. The transit network that knits downtown into a seamless whole doesn’t extend much beyond the core.
Maybe one day it will; but by then it will likely be too late. The city will be bound in chains and fully franchised.
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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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How can Toronto blend condos and community?
Dave McGinn – The Globe and Mail
Vicki Trottier and her husband are both avid cyclists who have to lock up their bikes outside because there’s no storage in their condo. When they take their dog for a walk by the water, they have to scramble across the many lanes of busy traffic on Lake Shore Boulevard.
“You have to scurry to make it across,” she says. Exercising in the building can pose the opposite problem – too much standing around waiting.
“We have 300-something units in our building and we’ve got this tiny little gym,” she says. “There’s two treadmills.”
Comment: And almost every time I show prospective buyers the gym in a given condo, it is empty.
And the Trottiers, like their neighbours in the Lake Shore and Bathurst area, are still waiting for a park that developers promised about seven years ago.
The Trottiers moved from Haileybury, about 150 kilometres north of North Bay, to their condo in 2011. They chose the building because it is close to downtown and near the lake. But despite the advantages of geography, life as a condo resident is rife with problems – from traffic to a lack of green space or amenities inside the buildings.
In the last decade, the condo boom in Toronto has stacked the skyline with towers. Now, the approximately 250,000 to 275,000 people who live in them say that, in the race to build, city planners and councillors failed to adequately consider how to create neighbourhoods.
But the city is finally starting to listen. “I don’t think we anticipated, say, five years ago, or even before that, that this boom was going to continue,” says Peter Moore, project manager for the City of Toronto. Last month, the city launched the first of its kind series of public consultations to improve conditions for condo dwellers. The initiative is an acknowledgment that Toronto’s condo culture is here to stay. As the consults give a voice to the people in this community, what’s being heard is that condo living has myriad issues – and that greater attention needs to be paid to addressing them as more and more buildings break ground.
“It’s time, as we review the official plan and the province reviews the Condominium Act, to understand what the people who live in these buildings actually experience, as residents in vertical neighbourhoods,” says councillor Adam Vaughan, who proposed the consultations.
The four public meetings – held downtown, in Scarborough, Etobicoke and North York – are now over, and an online survey will be launched in early March. Another round of consultations will be held in early summer. A report is expected to be sent to council by the fall, although there is no fixed date for implementing whatever recommendations are made.
Jennifer Keesmaat, the city’s chief planner, says that, while it is too soon to speculate about specific recommendations that might come from the consultations, it is very likely the process will have implications for the official plan.
“We need to be thinking much more extensively about … condos not as buildings but as part of a neighbourhood,” she says. “We’re seeing a significant transition in the landscape and the form of the city at this moment that really is the impetus for us beginning to think in new ways about how neighbourhoods are defined in the city.”
If the issues raised at the consultations don’t find their way into the big picture of the official plan, they will almost certainly impact the city’s approach to condos.
That could mean requiring more spaces for children to play inside condos or decks for pet owners, among other items, Mr. Vaughan says.
“It may be small stuff, but I think it will be substantial for the people that are making homes and neighbourhoods out of these tall buildings,” he says.
Toronto’s condo boom began gaining momentum in 1999. Since that time, more than 120,000 condo units have been completed, close to 55,000 of which were finished after the financial downturn that began in 2008. And the momentum shows few, if any, signs of slowing: As of January of this year, there were 40,474 condo units under construction in Toronto, according to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation.
Everyone from seniors who have downsized to young singles just starting first careers call condos home.
Don Henderson, vice-president of the Humber Bay Shores Condominium Association, a group that represents 18 buildings in Etobicoke, wants to know why the city is only now stopping to ask what issues condo residents face.
“They should have come up with a plan well before now,” he says. The city and developers are “both winning on runaway development. Who’s losing are the people that are left behind to live in those communities.”
Oksana Ermolenko, who moved into a condo in the Humber Bay area late last year, attended one of the public meetings.
“There is a lot of development going on, so I think it’s great the city is holding these consultations,” she says.
Issues raised at the consultations have differed by area. People at the downtown meeting were more vocal about the need for better cycling infrastructure and parking space than were those at the Etobicoke meeting, where there were frequent complaints about inadequate TTC service for those who face longer commutes into the core.
But there has been much more overlap than differences in the issues raised. A need for more green space and places to walk pets was frequently voiced. So too was a desire for better retail at street level beyond fast-food restaurants and dry cleaners. Many people also criticized the city for letting developers get away with shoddy construction: One man at the Etobicoke meeting said he could hear his neighbours through the walls talking on their phones and closing cupboards. Others asked for larger communal spaces so that residents could have more interaction with each other. Some asked for grocery stores and community centres.
The list goes on. While it runs the gamut from small issues such as better gyms to much larger concerns over things like traffic, the clear desire is for policies that will help create communities – places where you put down roots and know your neighbours and can walk to a coffee shop or the park when you leave your building.
“I’m in an area where there are a lot of new buildings going up but not a lot of services,” says Ms. Ermolenko. “There is a lot more need for coffee shops and small retail. There’s only so much time you can spend in your own building before you want to enjoy the outdoors.”
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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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Toronto’s downtown a neighbourhood of the arts
David Macfarlane – Toronto Star
The recent statement of Paul Godfrey, the chair of the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corp., that Toronto’s downtown is an appropriate site for a casino because it isn’t a neighbourhood, has been clarified, explained, put back into any context from which it might have been unfairly taken, and all but recanted by the man who made it and by those who share his enthusiasm for casinos.
Still, it seems to me that any attempt to put candour back in the box from which it has sprung is about as useless as trying to recall an email you didn’t intend to send.
Quite apart from the fact that there are many people who live in condos, apartments, lofts, flats, co-ops, rooming houses, townhouses, duplexes and houses in and around the areas that Godfrey appears to regard – at least in his initial statement – as desert, his observation raises the question of what a neighbourhood is.
Is it a few streets of homes and lawns and hedges that are customarily kept at least a half-hour car-ride away from the downtown? Is it only where we sleep and keep our barbecues? Or do we, in a city such as Toronto and in a century such as this one, define neighbourhood in a more complex way than what might have prevailed a generation ago.
I suppose we all define our neighbourhoods differently. But when I stopped to think about it I realized that for me the downtown is the neighbourhood of the arts.
That’s not the only thing it is, obviously. And of course the downtown is not the only place for the arts. It may not even be the place where the most exciting and innovative arts prevail anymore. But it remains possible in Toronto to go for a walk through the city’s cultural centre, as I did the other day when the weather was so fine. Going for a walk is what people in neighbourhoods often do.
In our neighbourhood, I stop to tell the busker who is playing outside the ROM that I really like his version of “Tennessee Waltz” and to ask if it is intended as a memorial tribute to Patti Page.
And in my neighbourhood, I listen to the amazingly good classical guitarist I encounter on a sidewalk four blocks later.
In my neighbourhood I go to the Angell Gallery on Ossington and the Metivier Gallery on King, and when I walk past city hall, I remember a neighbourhood gathering one September not so very long ago when I stood in a crowd on Nathan Phillips Square listening to the simulcast of the gala concert that opened the city’s new opera house.
In our neighbourhood, I stop in a bar called Graffiti’s in Kensington Market late Sunday afternoons to hear the excellent Michael Brennan and friends perform, because sometimes there’s nothing better than a good voice, a good song and a few well-played acoustic guitars.
And when I’m in the neighbourhood, I go to performances of the National Ballet because sometimes there’s nothing better than grand, exquisite beauty.
Once, in the neighbourhood, I stood with everyone else in Roy Thomson Hall at the end of a late-night performance of Beethoven’s 9th.
In our neighbourhood, I love the buzz of excitement of an opening night at the Tarragon Theatre or Passe Muraille. And let me tell you: the neighbourhood really comes to life during TIFF, and the International Festival of Authors and Luminato.
We are a neighbourhood. That could well be Toronto’s motto.
And if anyone should be leading the protest against the insertion of something as lifeless as a casino into the city’s downtown fabric it should be the leaders of our arts institutions.
They are the ones who most benefit from a vibrant city. And they are the ones who have the most to lose when, through municipal carelessness and greed, the neighbourhood starts to go.
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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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