Monday 20 January 2014

Who is actually writing the plans for municipal growth ?

Building cities up and not out
By Mark Schadenberg
When playoffs are looming in any sport, a coach may talk about the team’s intensification.
In terms of developing subdivisions, intensification is a much different term.
Don’t blame your local municipality as residential lots shrink, and apartment buildings are taller and closer together.
The Ontario government – likely in an attempt to preserve farmland, but for many other reasons as well – has created laws and rules about municipal growth.
The creation of the so-called green belt in the GTA and through the Golden Horseshoe along Lake Ontario has increased the value of land in that area as it’s become rare to find a possible subdivision or commercial or industrial locale. At the same time, it has also made ‘defined’ residential planned areas more valuable outside the green belt, especially in neighbouring communities such as Brantford, Guelph and even Waterdown.
If you want to point fingers, the direction should be at the Ontario ministry of municipal affairs and housing. It is their ‘provincial planning framework’ (Their term and not mine) which indicates how cities can and will grow (Link and excerpt details below).
In Woodstock, for example, the purchasing premiums on buying a property with more than 50 feet of frontage becomes obvious and necessary as the developer only needs to explain provincial legislation and guidelines. Lots are now often sold per-foot frontage. Most new residential areas in Woodstock thereby feature lots about 40 feet wide and not 50.
The Ontario plan also favours (desires / requests / insists upon) in-fill, re-development of retired industrial buildings into apartments (Example: Homestead Christian Care apartments in old Harvey Woods plant on VanSittart), and even stretching upwards in building to more than 12 storeys.

Intensification means the development of a property, site or area at a higher density than currently exists, through development, redevelopment, infill and expansion or conversion of existing buildings. Each community’s form and level of intensification will differ, based on their specific characteristics such as location, history, community strengths and preferences
Planning and design features that support intensification may include:
-Street-level awnings for shade
-Wide sidewalks and street furniture for pedestrian comfort
-Mobility-friendly curb cuts
-Light coloured surfaces for pavement, roads and buildings
-Energy-efficient lighting to increase safety
-Human-scale designs that create active streets and promote physical activity
-Adaptive reuse of heritage buildings
-Transit stops and stations
-Permeable pavement
-Smaller lot sizes
-Pedestrian and bicycle pathways.

The above was simply copied and pasted from the provincial government website.

Increased density is an increase in intensification.
When a final analysis can be made (read two of the Free Press links below about expansion), the city is caught in the middle and therefore attempts to compromise between what a developer requests, what the province is mandating, and what is preferred by the local residents in a neighbourhood.
This is the main reason why nothing taller than four stories will be built on the former Woodstock General Hospital site on Riddell Street. The city would never be able to pass a zoning for only low density for this re-development, especially since the hospital was also multi-floors. The city can suggest and insist upon medium density, however.
Anything high density would be much taller than a four-storey structure.
This is yet another story (pun intended) in which there is no reason to point your fingers at city council or the local engineering office or city planners when announcements / proposals of any type are made public as those holding the red tape at City Hall are bound (another level of red tape) by the rules set out at Queens Park in Toronto.


LINKS:
http://www.thestar.com/business/real_estate/2013/11/05/provincial_intensification_efforts_now_a_patchwork.html

Mark Schadenberg, Sales Representative
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES designation)
Royal LePage Triland Realty
757 Dundas St, Woodstock
www.wesellwoodstock.com
(519) 537-1553, cell or text
Email: mschadenberg@rogers.com
Twitter: markroyallepage

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