Didama
Active Member
102 ave is dead either way, if you allow cars or close it to pedestrians. Your support of a few cars per hour vs a few pedestrians per hour is equally ideological.
They will come, but don't close stretches just to close stretches to satisfy philosophical and ideological beliefs.
How many streets has Downtown Vancouver permanently closed?
Vancouver's new pedestrian-friendly 'open street' is only open sometimes to pedestrians
Great concept, poor execution says the public.www.vancouverisawesome.com
I cannot stress enough that I lived Downtown as a pedestrian first for 15 years, was and still am an advocate for urban realms supporting mixed-uses and modal options, but 102 Avenue is simply NOT the place and would require millions and tens of millions to make it receptive for the non-existing density or footfall to support things there.
104 Street can only do it on summer Saturdays, perhaps one more day of the week, Rice Howard (arguably a much better option) cannot generate the traffic in the core of the core to do it and very few cities have year-round examples to pull from; let alone ones with the lack of density, transit options and desire to be in a Downtown.
If it quacks like a duck it's probably a duck. Your default setting is cars first, lets face it. What's wrong with just closing this street and having it car free even if it isn't being used heavily by pedestrians? Can't we just have a space that's car free for the sake of being car free?
Not really, Ian. Every single time someone here proposes a pedestrian-first move (or a car-second, at least) you tend to be one of the first opposing.Obtuse and inaccurate. Bravo.
Not really, Ian. Every single time someone here proposes a pedestrian-first move (or a car-second, at least) you tend to be one of the first opposing.
Close 102 to cars? No
Road diet on Whyte Ave to prioritize transit and pedestrian? No
Road diet on Jasper Ave? No
I could go on, but the point is proven.
Why, because I want to see efficient, successful streets and avenues that are multi-modal and when the case is built to make changes, to do so in a way that is going to in vigour, bring people, business and investment. There are various opportunities to create part-time pedestrian streets, perhaps even for the entire summer, but these need to be carefully thought-out, programmed and planned. The classic chicken and the egg conundrum maybe, but 102 Avenue ain't the spot, not now, not likely in my lifetime.
Closing things, be it for bikes, cars, trains or planes, just to permanently close things for a particular use isn't a particularly good argument. Look at other cities around the world with great pedestrian streets, or even Stephen Avenue and you must have some fundamentals, sizes, built form and density to make them work well. Pilot projects can be a good first step and help flush out where something more permanent might be most productive.
Whyte is a challenge because of very few E-W arterial options and while I do very much support a revised Whyte, it's above my pay grade. I do think that it needs attention and improvements for those of us who are pedestrians, visitors and the like, but I've been pleased with what's been happening for the last few years and believe that trend will continue.
Jasper needs some capacity at peak, but I'd argue that the 97-101st was very well done and a good balance. If you are just wanting to 'retake' or 'take back' the streets, that's almost an entirely different conversation as I mention in a previous post.
Remember when Paths closed Jasper from 103-108 and down to 99ave? It was hugely successful around 105-106st BECAUSE it has character, diverse uses, outward facing businesses and was programmed. The rest of the areas were lacklustre and a relatively poor experience and that was a 25C day with 10,000 people.
Edmonton tends to have relatively poor public realms, although improving, sidewalks and pedestrian investment does need a continued focus.
Let me be very clear here, I am a pedestrian first, have contributed to those efforts in a variety of ways and while not always outright supportive of certain items or options, I am 100% behind improved pedestrian experiences, safer/cleaner streets and a renewed focus of small scale retail along our streets and avenues.
Why, because I want to see efficient, successful streets and avenues that are multi-modal and when the case is built to make changes, to do so in a way that is going to in vigour, bring people, business and investment. There are various opportunities to create part-time pedestrian streets, perhaps even for the entire summer, but these need to be carefully thought-out, programmed and planned. The classic chicken and the egg conundrum maybe, but 102 Avenue ain't the spot, not now, not likely in my lifetime.
Closing things, be it for bikes, cars, trains or planes, just to permanently close things for a particular use isn't a particularly good argument. Look at other cities around the world with great pedestrian streets, or even Stephen Avenue and you must have some fundamentals, sizes, built form and density to make them work well. Pilot projects can be a good first step and help flush out where something more permanent might be most productive.
Whyte is a challenge because of very few E-W arterial options and while I do very much support a revised Whyte, it's above my pay grade. I do think that it needs attention and improvements for those of us who are pedestrians, visitors and the like, but I've been pleased with what's been happening for the last few years and believe that trend will continue.
Jasper needs some capacity at peak, but I'd argue that the 97-101st was very well done and a good balance. If you are just wanting to 'retake' or 'take back' the streets, that's almost an entirely different conversation as I mention in a previous post.
Remember when Paths closed Jasper from 103-108 and down to 99ave? It was hugely successful around 105-106st BECAUSE it has character, diverse uses, outward facing businesses and was programmed. The rest of the areas were lacklustre and a relatively poor experience and that was a 25C day with 10,000 people.
Edmonton tends to have relatively poor public realms, although improving, sidewalks and pedestrian investment does need a continued focus.
Let me be very clear here, I am a pedestrian first, have contributed to those efforts in a variety of ways and while not always outright supportive of certain items or options, I am 100% behind improved pedestrian experiences, safer/cleaner streets and a renewed focus of small scale retail along our streets and avenues.