dunno
Active Member
I honestly wanna say overlooked. I still had people from out east thinking we're a tiny town, and probably the same with Americans too. We did breach the psychological "one million" milestone just recently as well so we're not on the radar as much.
Considering Vancouver still hasn't managed the one million milestone, I don't think the City of Edmonton reaching that within its arbitrary bounds amounts to much. Metro areas are much better barometers for this and with that in mind Edmonton passed a million close to 20 years ago. And I remember the hoopla that was made about it back then too.
Anyway, I agree that we're overlooked and often times people underestimate how big the city actually is. I've had people think Winnipeg is bigger. But also, most people don't look that closely at these things. Toronto-Montreal-Vancouver occupy a consistent 1-2-3 spot in Canada and beyond that, for most, it's anybody's guess.
But for as much as I complain about Edmonton, it's really trying to reimagine itself into a better place via urban policy than that our late 20th century car-centric legacy gifted us this century. Edmonton is moving the needle in a lot of very good ways and in some cases is kind of a trailblazer in an understated way. We were the first city to remove parking minimums, we've now got arguably the most progressive zoning in the country (which came after years of densification via skinny homes proving popular), are aggressively expanding rapid transit in a way that will close the gap we have with our peers in about a decade (and our rapid transit, so far, is better designed than what's in those peers), there's been an expansion of bridge housing and other supports to deal with those most marginalized, there's the plan to spend a few hundred million to give us hundreds of km of new bike lanes, and TODs are finally starting to blossom in a way that's been normal in most other big Canadian cities.
I remember how there was a lot of optimism in Edmonton a decade ago too, and although I'm disappointed we didn't quite reach as high as I thought we did, things are still overall improved from 20-25 years ago, and I think because so much work has been needed to reorient things here away from the status quo, we're only now starting to see the fruit bear from those earlier seeds, while more seeds are being planted. I'm cautiously optimistic for the Edmonton of 2033.
This doesn't mean Edmonton still can't learn a thing or two from Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto, Montreal, hell even smaller cities like Halifax, Quebec City, and Winnipeg. And I still will bemoan certain things, such as the general lack of architectural quality and only having one true busy main street (although maybe in a decade that won't be the case... here's looking at you, 124th).