New Subway - Bad
Planning
By Errol Young
December 13,
2017
This week the
new subway extension opened and there is nary a complaint
because we have been waiting over 20 years for this.
But the Keele Finch intersection is a planning disaster.
Many millions
of dollars over five years were spent on this roadway but it
misses the mark in many human ways. They built a suburban
nightmare made to move cars, not people.
If you are
driving - great. If you are walking - too bad.
Pedestrians
will be faced by wind-swept expanse of concrete and asphalt.
Look for a tree or a park bench and you will be
disappointed.
A
neighbourhood should be defined by the quality of its
walkability. It should invite you to stroll by shaded by the
trees and cooled by the grass, smiling at the playing
children and the seniors chatting.
This will not
happen at Keele and Finch. Asphalt will radiate the sun
under our feet on both sides of the curb.
Here the
benches at the station entrance are cast from concrete
making sure you don't sit too long. Children will have to
navigate all the lanes of traffic to get to the three
elementary schools to the South.
Bike
infrastructure. None. Planners know that bicycles will be an
important part of transportation in the future. Even if they
put some in, in just those newly built two kilometre of road
and it ended there, it could be linked up in the future with
a city wide system. Cyclist will just have to dance and die
with the cars.
And when you
do find planted trees, half a kilometre to the south, they
line the road like uniformed security guards, guarding the
roadway. Each identical in species and age like a Lego
forest. Couldn't they have tried to create an urban forest
with different varieties and grouping and species? No. this
is the suburbs and the car rules. It is a monument to the
cars and trucks that it was built for.
Would they
have planned like this in Bloor St. West, Rosedale or the
Annex?
Looks like we
are stuck with this auto-centred suburban desert for the
next 75 years.
Enjoy your
drive through our neighbourhood.
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