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Originally Posted by Migrant_Coconut
15 metres confirmed (page 13). Again though, that's still a lot of assumptions and a lot of additional landscaping for just two extra northbound lanes, when City Hall finds it easier to just turn Dunsmuir into a biker/pedestrian ramp and have drivers use Georgia and Expo. I'll point out that current models have the new grid adequately handling current levels of traffic - now slightly declining - and that both City Council and the public want a High Line (which, mind you, would take up the entire street up until the park).
Honestly, I'm liking the Pacific streetcar less and less - especially now that the NEFC team wants it to be a mixed-traffic branch. I think an upgraded 23 would be better.
I don't follow. We're talking about ring roads and the relative size of their cities; Columbus has a ring road which is nowhere near its downtown, and could likely function just fine without the central freeways.
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Oakland and Century City started out as offices, that's fair, but most of the growth came from new residents. Going back to Bellevue, the place was already somewhat big even ten years before Microsoft moved in - and MS started in Redmond, which is definitely not very dense or tall.
Surrey and Metrotown began as malls, and now they're getting new residents, new universities and new offices. They've had a slow start, it's true, but history is repeating itself.
As for space, even downtown Vancouver's still got room left over. I'm not worried about Surrey running out even in the far future.
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Yes, and it would be easier to just remove the viaducts and keep the current ground road network (instead of redesigning it to accommodate better traffic flow as in the current plan). People realized that was dumb and designed a bidirectional system that queued traffic to take turns on the use of the corridor, reducing congestion.
This is the same thing all over again. The difference is that no one cares enough about the streetcar to fight for it, not even the 'urbanist' Vancouver.
But it's clearly a minimalistic path, not a 'High Line'. If it WAS an attempt at a 'High Line', I would agree with you. The view on the top will no doubt be nice, but it's just not that ambitious.
Exactly, you just proved my point. If there was enough space to begin with, 'mixed traffic' wouldn't even BE an issue. There would actually be a purpose to that part of the streetcar, as in it would improve transit service to Yaletown.
Yes. And that image clearly shows a mostly-office oriented center.
Most growth in DTs will inevitably end up as new residents due to the required extra FSR in residences vs jobs (for one, not everyone moving in will work)- mixed-use is the goal of every downtown center. But the core started out as offices.
In Metrotown, Brentwood, and Surrey, there are office developments, but they either end up replacing office space lost to redevelopment (Brentwood) have difficulty filling up (Metrotown), or have difficulty getting built in the first place (Surrey). You can dump as many public institutions into a place as you want. But this is a capitalist country, you can't force companies who don't want to move TO move.
DT Vancouver's pretty much running out of space, with most of the parkades and parking spaces let either being built on or having some proposal at various stages of completion. Most of the areas for redevelopment are either older buildings, on peripheral areas of DT (Yaletown, Gastown, NEFC). One of the only exceptions that comes to mind is the Hudson's Bay Parkade.
Of course, DT can sprawl out into the DTES/Chinatown, Broadway, and the West End, and probably will, but the prime land closest to the core is already practically filled up. The existing office clusters nearby is a positive reinforcement for offices further out, but still nearby.
Surrey, if companies eventually do decide the locate their en masse, may have to deal with that from the get-go, which inherently makes it more unattractive. It's a negative feedback loop.
How many companies want their corporate HQs on Scott Road (or maybe even Gateway) rather than Surrey Central/King George?
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Originally Posted by VancouverOfTheFuture
parking on arterial's is ridiculous. Easy Park is owned by the CoV and as a condicition of development along an arterial developers should be required to build some amount of public-pay parking that Easy Park would manage to replace the meter spots on the arterial.
with the end game being that arterial's are used for the movement of people and goods, not for parking since that is a terribly inefficient use of that space.
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Arterials having street parking is generally for businesses or to be used for future road expansions. It's an alternative to make ultra-wide sidewalks/green space on the sides of roads (as is done in the suburbs).