Downtown Saskatoon may see a tall addition in its skyline, depending on feedback received for on proposed plans to replace the Saskatoon Sta
Downtown Saskatoon may see a new structure in its skyline, depending on public feedback received on a proposed 35-storey building to replace the StarPhoenix’s old office.
In addition to the potential 35-storey apartment or condominium building on the south side, a 24-storey dwelling is planned for the north. Between them, the existing two-level office space will house a retail unit and a five-floor building that will contain retail spaces and covered parking, according to construction plans provided by the site’s owners to the City of Saskatoon.
The applicants interested in building on 5th Avenue submitted a request to the city to rezone to allow mixed retail and residential uses.
While the older part of the city near the lake is dense, walkable and relatively well-served by transit, the rest...well...isn't.
The intersection of N. Cicero and W. North Avenue, where stroads collide.
As newcomers to Chicago, my wife and I like to explore parts of the city we haven't seen yet, and familiarize ourselves with different neighborhoods.
This week, we took a trip westward along Irving Park to Six Corners, then turned down Cicero, then back along Division, with a couple of detours until we went back northward along Lake Shore Drive. In all, we went about six miles west (a little under 10km).
W. Irving Park Road, aka IL-19.
Irving Park, Cicero, and to some degree Division are arterial roads. Arterials are defined as "higher traffic" urban roads, ranking below actual highways.
However, using the Strong Towns definition, these are really stroads - the unfortunate street-highway hybrid that is designed for higher speeds like a highway, with wider lanes; but have multiple potential points for conflicts and accidents such as driveways, turning entrances and exits to parking lots, intersections and crosswalks. Plus, they're usually just a block from residential streets, meaning residents are exposed to highway levels of noise and pollution.
Stroads are highly unpleasant places to walk. The sidewalks, where they exist, are usually narrow, and (as in one spot we noticed along Cicero) obstructed by telephone poles, street signage, utility hardware, and too often, people illegally parked on the sidewalk. They're often impossible to navigate for people using mobility aids like wheelchairs; there's also little to no tree canopy, leaving pedestrians exposed to harsh weather conditions, particularly in summer.
N. Cicero Avenue is mostly a depressing series of new and used car dealerships, gas stations, car repair shops, Jiffy Lubes, and empty storefronts with papered-up windows.
Using Jan Gehl's definition of pedestrian-scale urbanism, there is nothing of interest here; you're faced with long blank walls, nondescript low-rise strip developments fronted by mandated parking, chain-link fences, and empty lots dominated by weeds.
It isn't a place you would willingly walk to, it's a place you drive to and usually only because you have to.
There's no rapid transit to these neighborhoods; just buses. This means residents are often forced into car dependency, and they're also to some degree cut off from jobs, education and other opportunities because of the transit time involved.
For instance, to travel from a typical house in Belmont-Cragin to Columbia College on transit is, at best, about an hour using the bus and CTA trains.
Using buses only (for instance, if the trains are down) it can get closer to two hours.
Imagine if there was a REM-style automated rapid transit line to downtown, at an average speed of 51km/hr; It could make the trip in 11 minutes. Even if there were six additional stops of 30 seconds each along the way, that means you could get from Belmont-Cragin to downtown in maybe 15 minutes, tops.
This is all doable, but it requires money and political will.
Fixing Chicago's Stroads
Thankfully, there are groups, like Strong Towns Chicago, that are advocating for change.
In an op-ed for the Chicago Tribune, Aaron Feldman backs the new plan to redesign Western Avenue, a north-south arterial, using transit and rezoning for higher density housing:
Rezoning and improving bus transit along Chicago’s Western Avenue address the dual crises of transit and housing in a bold manner.
A big part of this proposed transformation is Bus Rapid Transit (BRT), where buses are given dedicated lanes to get them out of car traffic, priority signaling, and (ideally) dedicated boarding stations.
While it'd be wonderful to magically build out a network of REM-like lines to transit-ize these arterials, BRT is a lower-cost option that can be built out relatively quickly.
Rezoning, densification, BRT, and road diets (lane removals; widening sidewalks; installation of protected bike lanes; more crosswalks, etc.) could positively affect all of the stroads we've mentioned, transforming them back into community-centric destination streets, and connecting residents to more opportunities.
This could be supplemented by programs to put short-term "pop up" retail, arts, and other community services into vacant storefronts, to breathe life back into "dead" sections of these streets.
If you're interested in learning more, or participating, here's the links for Strong Towns Chicago:
Moratorium on rezoning for closed Atlanta Medical Center appears to be ending
by Darin Givens | August 28, 2024
The extended moratorium on rezoning for development at Wellstar's Atlanta Medical Center in Old Fourth Ward appears to be coming to an end, and the city is preparing to allow for new things to be built on much of the property.
In a new AJC article, City Council's Liliana Bakhtiari says: "My personal goal is to balance what is being discussed around medical needs — because that is desperately needed — but also the need for housing and not wasting this opportunity. We can’t force Wellstar to do anything. They are working with us — absolutely. But I do not believe we’ll be able to hold this for another moratorium."
The City has repeatedly renewed a moratorium on rezoning the AMC property since the hospital closed in 2022 to allow for planning for the property, with hopes of bringing some medical services back to at least a portion of it.
The Department of City Planning gave a presentation to NPU-M this week that shows plans to include up to 2.4 million square-feet of residential units, 120,000 square-feet of commercial and retail shops and 240,000 square-feet of offices space. Part of the property would ideally contain medical services, though there's no specific service identified.
One challenge will be relocating the services for people experiencing homelessness. The former Athletic Club on the property has been used as a temporary emergency shelter for the past few months.
Note that this is just a plan to allow for rezoning. Wellstar still owns the campus and no proposal from a developer is known at this point, at least not publicly.
After more than a year and a half of sitting vacant in the Old Fourth Ward neighborhood, the former Atlanta Medical Center site is finally o
These gigantic towers designed by Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) are planned for Williamsburg's waterfront just north of the Domino Sugar Factory development. At 600 and 650 feet tall, these two towers will house a thousand units of housing surrounded by six acres of public space with a park and beach. Previously home to Con Ed, the site runs along the East River just north of the Williamsburg Bridge between North 1st and North 3rd Streets. The developer, Two Trees, is requesting a rezoning and will likely include a YMCA, community-oriented retail, office space, and 250 units of affordable housing. The developer recently purchased the 3.5-acre site from Con Edison for $350 million. Jutting out into the East River, two jetties will offer nature trails while protecting the cove and beach encircled by a pier. The park entrance will be strategically located at the foot of Metropolitan Avenue, which will be anchored by the two towers allowing for an extended view plane down Metropolitan. The park would also unify Grand Ferry Park with North Fifth Park. BIG, who is also leading the BIG U/East Side Coastal Resiliency Project, and has submitted an exiting plan for the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, has also incorporated resiliency and flood mitigation elements into the project, including wetlands, berms, and marshes that help absorb flooding during storm surges. The beach, community boating, and outdoor "tidal classroom" featured in the proposal are a step in the right direction for Williamsburg's waterfront, which has been overburdened with new luxury residential towers over the past decade. While it features two 600+ foot residential towers, the project seeks to give the waterfront back to the public, something we at NYC Urbanism advocate for. What do you think of the proposal? #williamsburgbrooklyn #williamsburg #dominopark #eatriver #greenpoint #bjarkeingels #bushwick #bushwickinlet #fortgreene #dumbo #brooklyn #architecture #archilovers #skyline #skyscraper #rezoning #ulurp #nycarchitecture #brooklynnyc #brooklynnavyyard #dominosugarfactory #bigu #escrp #eastriverpark #urbanis #urbanplanning #cityplanning #nycurbanism (at Williamsburg, Brooklyn) https://www.instagram.com/p/B6MAyleHUef/?igshid=himf60ywl5eo
Inwood has the lowest average rents in the borough. Now developers and their high-rise buildings are coming.
Continuing gentrification, aided and abetted by rezoning for higher densities. Landlord pressure and scare tactics make tenants suffer. Where is our “progressive” mayor in all this?
Jumaane Williams wants a ‘racial impact study’ for all proposed rezoning plans
Jumaane Williams wants a ‘racial impact study’ for all proposed rezoning plans
Public Advocate Jumaane Williams wants to add a race-based analysis of all rezoning plans to the city’s cumbersome land-use review process
“Rezonings are one of the primary drivers of gentrification, which leads to displacement, which leads to racial segregation,” Williams said at a Manhattan press conference Wednesday. (more…)
Sketchbook from Sunday over on the Island for #giaf2018 // Oh, Mondays in September are so hard. I leave a cooling chunk of my heart over on Governor's Island and it really does take me some time to transition back into now, New York from there, sometime other. It's partly the amount of intensity spent on creating the art there; partly the disconnection from "regular life", and the nostalgia/emotional time travel of being On Base again; partly, and certainly not least, the camaraderie of the gathered artists. I haven't found that kind of intense, serious, joyful community in such numbers before-- it's really scary that Summer Camp is only the month of September. What will we do when it's over? #sketchbook #hands #governorsislandartfair2018 #governorsisland #rezoning #capitalismruinseverything #colonelsrow #gettingachildhooddoover #installation #standardissue https://www.instagram.com/p/BnjphSPBnJW/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=10uwqabq50wak