thommyjo
Senior Member
Neighborhood renewal is so important. It gets so many things accomplished at once.
Renews the roads and sidewalks, sure.
But also
1) narrows roads to reduce future tax burden for snow clearing/paving
2) drastically improves safety, having a large human impact, but also saving us money on future emergency services and healthcare
3) widens narrow sidewalks and adds MUPs. These are standard in many new areas, old areas deserve them too. These help kids, people in wheelchairs, people using strollers, groups of people walking together, etc.
4) adds trees to parks and boulevards. A massive improvement to aesthetic, greenness, future canopy coverage, air quality, reduces future heat island effect, gives a boulevard to help with snow clearing. Buffers pedestrians from cars.
5) improves old parks. Without needing a massive stand alone project, but often does simple upgrades to lighting, paths, benches, etc. making areas more liveable.
6) adds bike paths and improves crossings for bikes/pedestrians.
Doing all of these at once is soooo much more cost effective then seperate projects for parks, bike lanes, repaving, trees, etc.
These improvements also have carry forward effects, like making older, central communities more attractive to younger families, refilling older/dying schools. It makes property values increase, helping share the tax burden more equally. It attracts new developments (see boxcar in Calder, local retail in highlands, higher density in garneau/west jasper/inglewood).
I get that times are tough. But renewing old neighborhoods instead of building new ones, should be the priority.
Renews the roads and sidewalks, sure.
But also
1) narrows roads to reduce future tax burden for snow clearing/paving
2) drastically improves safety, having a large human impact, but also saving us money on future emergency services and healthcare
3) widens narrow sidewalks and adds MUPs. These are standard in many new areas, old areas deserve them too. These help kids, people in wheelchairs, people using strollers, groups of people walking together, etc.
4) adds trees to parks and boulevards. A massive improvement to aesthetic, greenness, future canopy coverage, air quality, reduces future heat island effect, gives a boulevard to help with snow clearing. Buffers pedestrians from cars.
5) improves old parks. Without needing a massive stand alone project, but often does simple upgrades to lighting, paths, benches, etc. making areas more liveable.
6) adds bike paths and improves crossings for bikes/pedestrians.
Doing all of these at once is soooo much more cost effective then seperate projects for parks, bike lanes, repaving, trees, etc.
These improvements also have carry forward effects, like making older, central communities more attractive to younger families, refilling older/dying schools. It makes property values increase, helping share the tax burden more equally. It attracts new developments (see boxcar in Calder, local retail in highlands, higher density in garneau/west jasper/inglewood).
I get that times are tough. But renewing old neighborhoods instead of building new ones, should be the priority.




