Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

Friday, December 12, 2014

Ontario Trails News - exactly, this is how people get around barriers in cities - trails

Tell us about your favorite Toronto Trail

How do we cross Toronto’s great divides?

Barriers as big as a highway and as small as a step divide us, reinforcing psychological walls. Fortunately, bridging them is often simple and not that costly.

What are those barriers that divide our city? Beyond the 401, the Don River and the Gardiner Expressway, invisible barriers both in the streetscape and in our minds conspire to keep us apart.
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CARLOS OSORIO / TORONTO STAR Order this photo
What are those barriers that divide our city? Beyond the 401, the Don River and the Gardiner Expressway, invisible barriers both in the streetscape and in our minds conspire to keep us apart.
Standing on the precipice of Hoggs Hollow, you can’t help but feel like this is where old Toronto ends.
From this perch looking north, the land falls away into a massive, forested gully before climbing up again and giving rise to the towers of North York centre, visible on the horizon.
There is no better place to appreciate the divide between Toronto’s two distinct populations: urbanite downtowners and the car-dependent residents of the former suburbs.
“It’s a concrete manifestation of the division we’ve lived for the last four years,” says Shawn Micallef, a founding editor of Spacing Magazine who has made a career of wandering the city on foot.
Hoggs Hollow Looking north on Yonge Street towards the towers of North York city centre.
TARA WALTON/TORONTO STAR
Hoggs Hollow Looking north on Yonge Street towards the towers of North York city centre.
While many of our barriers are man-made, Hoggs Hollow naturally separates those who walk and bike and would think twice before traversing it, from those who drive and barely notice the dip. Yet, when the Yonge subway was extended north of Lawrence, this gap was closed, and today, tens of thousands of commuters cross the valley underground without even knowing it’s there.
“It’s interesting how strong those psychological barriers are. Once they’re broken down, they seem so silly,” Micallef said.
Like Hoggs Hollow, many of Toronto’s barriers seem to be unmistakably concrete, but end up being a question of mindset and unquestioned habit.
Overcoming these barriers can be as simple as building a bridge, but because of the cost involved, it’s important those bridges are creatively designed to encourage people to use them, said Michel Trocme, an urban planner and partner at Urban Strategies Inc.
A good example of this is 11 km further south, where Bay St. passes under what’s become the city’s most discussed barrier: the Gardiner Expressway. Here, amid the scaffolding and construction cranes, a gleaming glass-enclosed pedestrian bridge has just been completed, stretching under the Gardiner and connecting the financial core with the new south core developments via the PATH system.
Pedestrian bridge under the Gardiner and over Lake Shore to link Union Station to the PATH.
AARON HARRIS/SPECIAL TO THE STAR
Pedestrian bridge under the Gardiner and over Lake Shore to link Union Station to the PATH.
The din of rumbling trucks overhead, combined with the grime and exhaust fumes underneath have for decades made traversing the Gardiner by foot a grim prospect.
“The Gardiner has always been thought of as a barrier,” said Trocme. “Along with the rail corridor, it’s a double whammy. The bridge overcomes this barrier and maximizes the PATH system and Union Station retrofit to create new opportunities south of the Gardiner.”
Without a connection to the PATH, people who have been avoiding the Gardiner would be unlikely to try out the new bridge. But linking to the system opens the way for hundreds of thousands of pedestrians who use the underground system every day, he said.
Looking south on the Don Valley Parkway.
TARA WALTON
Looking south on the Don Valley Parkway.
Farther east, at least a dozen bridges span the Don Valley, but few of them offer access down into the ravine. The Don Valley, with the river, the DVP and the railway, is a formidable barrier, but one that largely sits out of sight and out of mind.
This is a missed opportunity, says Jane Farrow, founder of the Jane’s Walk heritage tours of Toronto.
“Hydro corridors and ravines are the veins of our city. But because of the wind and perceived danger, people don’t want to walk there,” Farrow said.
The Don’s crumbling trails make the long distances between access points wearisome treks and discourage short jaunts into this wild space.
“With better trails and signage, instead of dividing, the ravines could connect the city and become the best way to commute … It’s a way of weaving together the suburbs and the core.”
This is something that’s already happening in the west end, where a group of Junction residents came together to build the West Toronto Railpath, a multi-use trail that runs along the Georgetown rail corridor from Caribou Ave to Dundas St. West.

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Ontario Trails News - cycling routes coming to Oxford - home of the Oxford County Trail Council, in 2015, Greenbelt has done more harm than good

Learn more about Ontario's cycling trails

Saturday, November 8th 2014 09:21
OXFORD COUNTY - Great roads and quiet traffic are just some of the assets Oxford County has that appeal to cyclists
Oxford County Cycling Committee is working hard to develop a series of cycling routes in hopes of making us a prime cycling destination. 
Tourism Specialist  Meredith Maywood says they worked closely with the award winning non-profit organization 'Transportation Options'. 
"They are known for the website 'Ontario By Bike' and what they do is they promote cycling and cycling tourism throughout the province. Ontario By Bike came down to Oxford County, they met with members of the Cycling Committee and reviewed the trails master plan and other cycling information for the area and they developed 11 cycling routes that would appeal to cyclists coming to the area."
"They vary in length from something that would appeal to someone who is very recreational so from 15-30km to people who are looking for a more challenging ride up in the area of 100km or more," says Maywood. " The routes have just been developed and we are actually just in the process of getting ready to launch the routes for 2015."
Oxford County businesses are being encouraged to have cycling amenities available which could earn them 'bike friendly certification'. 
Ten local businesses have received the Ontario by Bike designation which Maywood says varies based on the type of business it is. 
"For a restaurant having healthy food options, bike locks available and water bottle refill and then obviously information on cycling available. To accommodations they would want to have overnight lock up available so whether it's in the person's hotel room or another location on site and also a bicycle repair kit would be required for those groups."
Once the routes are launched, Maywood says a pocket-sized cycling map, downloadable route sheets and videos promoting cycling in the County will become available.

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Tom Curtis
TOM CURTIS

Has Toronto’s Greenbelt done more harm than good?

Tom Curtis is a Toronto-based real estate policy professional.
We are a few weeks away from the tenth anniversary of the Ontario Liberal government’s landmark passing of the Greenbelt Act.
This act enabled the creation of the world’s largest permanent greenbelt, which now protects about 7,200 square kilometres of land surrounding the Greater Toronto Area from urban development – an area larger than Prince Edward Island. The government claims that the Greenbelt supports healthy communities across the greater Golden Horseshoe by curbing urban sprawl and preserving natural heritage. Linda Jeffrey, now mayor of Brampton, explained earlier this year that the Greenbelt “supports our plans for a prosperous and sustainable Ontario” and that it “is one of the greatest contributions our generation has made to the future of Ontario.”

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Such strong rhetoric might lead us to assume that the legislation is delivering overwhelmingly and unquestionably positive results. However, the benefits of greenbelt policy are widely questioned. Referring to the 13 per cent of England that is greenbelt-protected, Paul Cheshire, emeritus professor of economic geography at the London School of Economics, writes that “the unstoppable damage [greenbelts] do to societal fairness, housing affordability, the economic efficiency of our cities, even the environment, is devastating.”
Consider two facts: 1) the population of the Greater Toronto Area is seeing unprecedented growth; 2) through the implementation of Greenbelt legislation, the supply of land is being severely restricted. Basic supply and demand economics will tell you that if demand increases dramatically and supply is limited then a shortage occurs and prices will rise. In 1991 the population of the GTA was 4.2-million; in 2001 it was 5.1-million, and by 2011 it was estimated to be 6.1-million. The provincial government projects that the area’s population will tip 8.9-million by 2036.
Meanwhile, Greenbelt legislation has been introduced, premised on controlling the GTA’s urban growth boundaries. This, along with municipally-enforced density and height restrictions, heritage building protections and NIMBYism, impedes any effort to balance the supply of housing stock with demand. The result of this imbalance has been extreme and it is highly visible: hyper-development and Manhattanization of the downtown core, rapid gentrification of neighbourhoods, severe overcrowding of the transit system, and skyrocketing rents and property values.
The Toronto Real Estate Board reports that average property sale prices in Toronto are 68 per cent higher than they were in 2005. The average price of a detached home in the GTA is now $700,000, in the City of Toronto this number is nearer to $900,000. Even condo sales in Toronto are averaging $380,000. Property owners, including many of Canada’s wealthiest, are laughing their collective way to the bank.
But not everyone is benefiting. As prices skyrocket, first-time buyers are finding it increasingly difficult to access the market (The Bank of Montreal reports that a typical Toronto family now has to spend 42 per cent of family income on mortgage payments for the average bungalow), and huge polarization is forming between the price of single-family homes and condominiums – restricting mobility within the market. Aggressive gentrification is resulting in the poor being pushed out of their neighbourhoods into the less-desirable periphery and, not surprisingly, the demand for affordable housing is huge. The Ontario Non-Profit Housing Association states that in 2013, 91,000 Toronto households were waiting for affordable housing. In addition, wait times for subsidized housing were 8.39 years in Peel, 7.57 years in York, and 6.67 years in the City of Toronto.
The provincial government’s first 10-year review of the Greenbelt Act is now due. However, it seems as though Queen’s Park has already concluded that the Greenbelt has been a unanimous success. In 2008, only 3 years after implementation of the Greenbelt and a full 7 years before its first review, the Liberals released criteria for expanding it. This document outlined the process by which municipalities could add land to the Greenbelt, while also stating that “reductions or deletions to the Greenbelt area will not be considered.” One has to wonder if there is any point in the review at all.
Regardless, it will be done in consultation of a government-appointed Greenbelt Council, comprised of a hand-picked team of environmentalists and supporters of the Greenbelt. It seems extremely likely that this will be a review focused on the conservation of green space and protection of idyllic private country estates, rather than the broader consequences the legislation has inflicted upon the region and its population to date.
There are many benefits to the provision of open spaces across the Toronto region: preserving natural heritage, supplying recreational space, providing clean air and water systems, and supporting the existence of farmland (although this claim is seriously questioned by some local farmers), to list a few. However, social equity is fundamentally important to our region and a healthy balance of these objectives is crucial. As with any government legislation, we must challenge the idea that Ontario’s Greenbelt is flawless and encourage debate.

Friday, November 7, 2014

Ontario Trails News - use trails, stay off roads and this would happen less often.

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