Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Trending towards Windsor?

If we see these national trends making their way down the 401 towards Windsor, do you think that we will be ready to capitalize on them?

Green and dense
Changing demographics, economics will make cities the crowded choice for the 21st century

When it comes to where Canadians choose to live, 65 per cent prefer to house themselves in suburbia and the balance in medium and large-size cities.

This ratio is about to change.

The past two decades show a steady decline in the population of small towns in many provinces and growth in cities.

Pricey single-family detached dwellings and job opportunities are the two key factors drawing the young to cities.

Lower-cost urban condos are fast becoming homes to many first-time buyers. On this front, we are fast closing ranks with our European counterparts who have lived in high-density settings for centuries and where apartment living is common.

With the mounting popularity of Canadian urban centres, the built product is bound to change. We are likely to see more tall towers in the heart of cities and their periphery.

These are the issues we are preparing our city council to address. These are the trends that successful urban areas are embracing as they contend with their eroding traditional economic base's and moving forward in a progressive manner. They are also the issues that our mayor and councillor pay lip-service to but don't really seem to understand the implications of their procrastination.

We are also seeing an emphasis on the public realm and the resulting rise of our quality of life when we design and build a quality product. The current debate about our downtown's revitalization is elevated when we learn from the experiences of other communities;

"Streetscapes are for me the rivers of life in a city, revealing in the passing flow the character and culture of the residents and what makes them and their surroundings so special."

"For the last several years, the city's Planning Department and the Community Redevelopment Agency and its prime landscape consultant, Pat Smith, have published and promoted an ambitious set of urban design standards and guidelines laying out a streetscaping strategy. Critical to the effort has been the tacit support of the Department of Transportation, which until recently had considered its prime objective to move cars and trucks fast and efficiently through Downtown. Making streets attractive for pedestrians at best has been an afterthought."

So, we can see where we want to go when it comes to pedestrianizing our landscape. We can see the importance of human-scaled development both to our quality of life and to developing our local economy. Other municipalities have acknowledged the relationship between their departments of transportation and land use planning. So what priorities does Windsor seem focused on currently. Our recent decisions to accomodate suburban sprawl and big-box development are major hints. From the Washington Post:

"And all of this is a shame, given that Kiev has historically been considered the most pleasant of the former Soviet Union's capitals -- a walkable alternative to Moscow. In his book "Imperium," about his travels through the declining Soviet Union, the late Polish journalist Ryszard Kapuscinski described Kiev as "the only large city of the former USSR whose streets serve not merely for hurrying home but for walking, for strolling." Kiev's main boulevard, Khreschatyk, he wrote, is something like a local Champs-Elys¿es, and he was impressed by Kiev's downtown "crowds of people" out "to get some fresh air."

A decade and a half later, the city that Kapuscinski liked no longer exists. Walking here can be dangerous because the sidewalks are covered with cars, both parked and moving. That ritual of city life -- the promenade -- has become an adventure in the sort of defensive, serpentine ambulation with which the pedestrian makes his way through a strip mall parking lot."

So the carrot-and-stick approach to an urbane lifestyle that community activists are attempting to employ here in Windsor is backed by the experience of numerous other cities. Curb sprawl while enriching the urban experience. The recipe for success.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

Didn't you know that the mayor and council know more than other cities? The way they act and vote it shows their arrogance that everyone else is doing it wrong and they are doing it right. The unfortunate part is that with every step they make they show themselves to be totally ignorant in the way they handle city business.
One can only dream that Windsor will become a city with a quality of life, a pedestrian friendly place that would be simiar to european cities. The fact is util we support local retailers and small business things will NEVER change.

Chris Holt said...

Hence Scale Down's raison d'etre. Hopefully, with the dialogue happening here and in the rest of Windsor's blogville, we can have a bit of an impact. We're taking the situation seriously here and are planning on bringing these issues to the forefront in a more participatory and positive way. The more people get involved, the better the chances that our elected representatives (both current and to-be-elected) not only understand the issues themselves, but understand that there is a growing movement to get these issues addressed and solutions implemented.

Anonymous said...

Maybe SDW can put up a countdown clock leading to the next election. Out with the old and ignorant and in with some people that can appreciate what public realm really is!

Adriano Ciotoli said...

If the mayor and council were serious about transforming Windsor into a real tourist destination, a European styled pedestrian friendly core and city would do wonders in attracting people and encouraging them to spend here.

I have always hoped that Chatham St., between Ouellette and Ferry, and Pelissier, between University and Chatham, would be closed to traffic and designed as pedestrian only route filled with large outdoor patios (Chatham Street Grill, City Beer Market, Coach & Horses, Koko Pellies, Slices, etc.) Plus there are already some nice retail stores there.

Add some trees, benches, tiled walkway, decorative lights hung across the streets. You could also do the same to the east side of Chatham up to the Casino and create a proper, flowing link into the core. That section already has popular establishments such as Plunkett’s and Beni Iguana’s. Include my idea of a permanent outdoor market at the old bus depot location. Something as simple as this can create a gathering place for locals and tourists alike along the lines of Sparks Street Mall in Ottawa.

Make the traffic lights at the intersection of Ouellette and Chatham a pedestrian crosswalk.

Once the city shows leadership on improvements and a vision, businesses will jump on board using great programs such as the facade improvement incentive offered by the DWBIA, Fresh Fronts.

James Coulter said...

Paradigm Shift:

(Warning, after catching up on my reading this weekend and watching the TSX and DOW tank out yesterday I’m a little pessimistic in my views today.)

The current powers that be, the people that control the destiny of this city are playing out of an old playbook. Reality is looming large over this city and Eddie is calling his own number. Eddie is going to get sacked.

No, we can’t fire him or recall him, reality is going to come out of the backfield and while he is waiting on all his blockers (P3 deals, The Star, Dwight, Sandra and Roger P.) to clear the way for him he’s gonna get blind sided and fumble the ball. Where I’m sitting, so far away from the field of play I can see a lot more that our home team’s QB. I can see a city whose manufacturing base is evaporating and with it our economic significance to the rest of Canada - along with all those good paying factory jobs.

Canada’s trade surplus is not due to the record breaking sales of Chrysler mini-vans or Ford engines or GM transmissions. We have a trade surplus from oil and gold. Windsor’s contribution to Ontario’s and Canada’s GDP is no longer significant. Denis Desrosiers will tell the GWHBA on Wednesday that this city is screwed.

As long as the border crossing is clear we can move all kinds Chinese made crap from the port facilities in Long Beach all the way to Toronto. Asian auto parts, Vancouver (Asian Gateway) to T.O. by rail and to KW by truck. We don’t need part suppliers in Southern Ontario we have the Greenlink highway to move them along unhindered.

The old way of doing things is poised to fail. When that happens there will be a lot of collateral damage (Eddie will hopefully be one victim) in this city. But it will create new norms, new ways of thinking and we will be able to show people a better way of living in this city. We will need a plan, and working from plans made in other cities under other economic conditions may not play here. I see a much smaller city with a lower median income. Shopping and services will have to be much more localized and we will have much less money to spend.

It may not be the future we want but it may need to be the future we plan for.

James

James Coulter said...

I just finished reading Dennis Desrosier's speach on Ed Arditti's blog. I feel much better after reading what he had to say.

Chris Holt said...

I have DeRosiers entire speech as an audio file, including many words not included in his print handout. Contact me if you would like a copy.

I was there, James, and DesRosiers said many mouthfuls. While not agreeing with every word he said, his heartfelt words about Windsor really struck a chord. It is obvious this is a man who truly cares about this city (as he noted - why would he continue doing what he does while getting beat up by council and the media if he didn't care?) and I really hope our councillors take his words to heart.

Unfortunately, I have yet to figure out how to post files larger than 10 meg to the blog, so I will send it out to interested parties if they want a copy.

I have also come to the conclusion that I really need to learn a little bit more about this computer-thingy if I want to successfully pass along other forms of media to get SDW's message through.

Chris Holt said...

It appears that this audio file is not just too large to upload to my server, but too large to send via email as well. It must be edited down to a couple smaller files.

I will work out this technicality today and post it as soon as possible.

Anonymous said...

Interesting that an analyst such as DesRosier can be viewed as an important and knowledgeable person by the auto sector and businesspeople around Canada but is dismissed by King Eddie and his Court. Who would you rather believe? The real movers and shakers of this economy or a mayor who runs from one crisis to the other without really fixing a thing?
I will let you decide.

James Coulter said...

The Star has nothing in today's paper or on-line. Apparently if you don't report critism it never happened. I've asked a number of people at work today what they thought of Dennis' speach yesterday and they had no idea that he was even in town.

James

James Coulter said...

I apologize for my overlooking the Star's coverage. It was buried in the Business section. However, I don't think Vanderdolon heard everything Dennis had to say. Either that or the editors cut a lot out his story.

Anonymous said...

Chris - just post it on You Tube.
Then embed the file in your blog via You Tube.