Kaizen
Senior Member
I really like this little build on 92st in the Quarters, turned out so well. More of these please!
I really like this little build on 92st in the Quarters, turned out so well. More of these please!
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It makes me very sad to see that, and then remember that Glenora residents successfully got a commercial proposal for near the Glenora LRT stop shut down. https://globalnews.ca/news/5880845/edmonton-glenoral-commercial-development-rejected/Agree, a great model for providing small-scale commercial to a community. Would love something like this in the heart of my own neighbourhood.
They have to drive those fancy cars somewhere!It makes me very sad to see that, and then remember that Glenora residents successfully got a commercial proposal for near the Glenora LRT stop shut down. https://globalnews.ca/news/5880845/edmonton-glenoral-commercial-development-rejected/
You're not wrong, but this one would have replaced some houses. The residents argued that it would "ruin the character of the neighbourhood"They have to drive those fancy cars somewhere!
Yes, it would bring people to their neighborhood or allow them to walk places in their own hood instead of them driving to other places in the city. Wealthy neighborhoods and developments don't typically follow development norms though.You're not wrong, but this one would have replaced some houses. The residents argued that it would "ruin the character of the neighbourhood"
Ah I see, I misinterpreted your comment. I agree with you completely.Yes, it would bring people to their neighborhood or allow them to walk places in their own hood instead of them driving to other places in the city. Wealthy neighborhoods and developments don't typically follow development norms though.
When it comes to neighborhoods like Glenora, Crestwood, Valleyview, Laurier Heights etc. there exists what I'd like to call an "opulence complex" among a vocal portion of their residents, in the sense that they believe that their neighborhoods are special unicorns which should only attract the finest and most lustrous and expensive single-family development (and strip malls, of course) in some sort of effort to keep out the inner city "heathens" from "infecting" their safe space .