Wax
New Member
Walked by west block today, the 102 ave SUP was getting poured.
I would agree with you if the bike line didn't need to be on 102 Ave going west through Wikhwentowin, Glenora and beyond.I wonder if 103 Avenue might be a better road for bikes, given the presence of the 104 Street Market and the parks on 105-107 Street. This would free up an extra lane for 102 Avenue and pedestrian markets.
Walked by west block today, the 102 ave SUP was getting poured.
Pretty sure that the NEW Rec Center was approved AFTER the West Line was set.....so it would have been foolhardy to presume that a magical rec center would appear out of nowhere - yet somehow plan for it? They can do an expansion one day....we've got bigger fish to fry for LRT expansion than this...let's move onWell I just passed by the new west end Rec Center site and now even more than before I say ETS HAS to extend the Valley Line to this area next to the Rec Center. I can't believe the short sightedness of our city planners. Not only is there the Rec Center but at least 6 of the medium density residential buildings right across the street from the Rec Center with room for maybe two or 3 more to be built plus at least 2 more of these buildings a couple blocks away already built and also a block or so away a grocery store and a couple smaller power centers. This area just needs a train to get there and it is an automatic TOD. Instead the valley line ends about 6 to 7 blocks away with a small park n ride lot a bus terminal, and only low density housing nearby. One more stop from Lewis Estates station to the Rec Center will potentially add a ton of LRT riders living in all those residential buildings.
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Isn't part of the idea of city planning that you don't just plop down transit and "hope" that's where development happens, but instead you create zoning and incentives to cluster development around mass transit. Lots of other cities have it figured out.I think the trouble with planning any kind of LRT is the lag between development and transit. When the LRT was extended to 23 Avenue, there wasn’t significant development south of AHD. I think it’s sometimes difficult to think 5-10 years ahead, but it’s safe to assume residential expansion will be near major nodes of employment, recreation and shopping.
in 2004 they released this master-plan identifying the approximate west end rec facility (pg 12-15): https://www.edmonton.ca/public-file...DF/RecFacilityMasterPlanAugust2004FullDoc.pdfPretty sure that the NEW Rec Center was approved AFTER the West Line was set.....so it would have been foolhardy to presume that a magical rec center would appear out of nowhere - yet somehow plan for it? They can do an expansion one day....we've got bigger fish to fry for LRT expansion than this...let's move on