Quote:
Originally Posted by scottN
I thought the whole point of our urban planning / zoning tradition was to make sure the rich/white people controlled all the good land and the poor/black/indigenous people were segregated into noisy, polluted and generally less desirable areas. By this measure it has been quite successful.
I think that framing the housing debate around "affordability" and "neighbourhood character" is a real disservice to our society. The debate should really be about how to correct past injustices perpetrated by the government itself.
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This is getting weird now... perhaps this response was meant for a different thread?
Back on topic:
I honestly don't see a Hastings line being anything other than a tunneled metro tbh

. My reasoning behind that is
(completely speculative, mind you) that it looks like you would have to take away traffic lanes in order to support an elevated line unless you wanted it to be Chicago-style elevated over the street. This not only reduces lanes on a major vehicle thoroughfare in Vancouver but it would also disrupt the neighbourhood/street in a way that would anger a lot of people that weren't necessarily against Skytrain extensions. I don't necessarily fight to preserve neighbourhood character
(and I hate typing out the words myself) but an elevated line over Hastings would completely change the neighbourhood in a way that people weren't expecting.
IF it were designed so that it crosses at Second Narrows then I could see the Hastings line emerge around PNE. But I feel that Hastings is quite developed as it is right now. Although I will keep an open mind to an elevated line over Hastings, I think that an elevated line over Hastings wouldn't benefit the neighbourhood as a whole.