Close X
Tuesday, January 7, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canadian Cities To Tame Downtown White Elephants Of 'Wrong-headed Planning'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Dec, 2015 01:40 PM
    VANCOUVER — It was a mid-century effort to launch Vancouver into the modern age — an elevated roadway made up of tonnes of concrete cutting through the city's shiny downtown core to serve the almighty automobile.
     
    The failed attempt ultimately became a saving grace.
     
    After the colossal Georgia Viaduct was built in 1972, a grassroots uproar stopped the construction of what would have been a multi-lane expressway.
     
    The City of Vancouver voted last month to tear down the twinned bridge while discussion continues over construction of a new street network below it.
     
    Other Canadian cities are also contending with their own white elephants of infrastructure — vestiges of the freeway-building craze in vogue during the 1960s and '70s that inspired public uprisings.
     
    "It's not overstating it to say that it was citizen protest against the plans for those expressways that had a lot to do with the salvation of Canadian inner cities," said Christopher Leo, professor emeritus of urban planning at the University of Winnipeg.
     
    "We have every reason to be really grateful. The fact that we still have viable downtowns has a great deal to do with the cancellation of those schemes."
     
    Leo said the particular brand of planning logic originated in the United States as part of a Cold War project aimed at protecting America from the Soviet threat by extending a reliable transportation network across the country.
     
    "Part of the idea of it was that you wanted to build overpasses high enough that you could run tanks under them," he said, though that initial reasoning served less of an impetus in the Canadian experience."
     
    Across the country sits another such example from the era — the Cogswell Interchange in Halifax, built in the post-war suburban boom of the late 1960s. The so-called Road to Nowhere consists of a swath of interlinking overpasses and roadways occupying about 6.5 hectares of prime ocean-side real estate.
     
     
    It was to have linked up to Harbour Drive, a proposed six-lane expressway wrapping around the city's idyllic waterfront. Protests over the demolition of 150 historic properties quickly put a stop to the project, but not before the sprawling concrete behemoth was built.
     
    "For 40 years, the interchange has stood as a remnant of a bygone era of thinking and, in many ways, an albatross around the city's neck," wrote a Halifax-based planning and design firm in a report commissioned by the city.
     
    Urban-planning academic and former Vancouver politician Gordon Price described how the freeway fetish that characterized the mid-century saw transportation logic initially intended to link municipalities together mistakenly applied within city limits. 
     
    He said the move threatened the urban fabric of downtown cores.
     
    "You actually have to destroy the idea of the city in order to do it, because cities are deliberately designed to be areas of interaction and congestion," Price said.
     
    "That's the point of them. People come together to trade, to interact, to exchange, whether it's goods or money or DNA."
     
    The wrong-headed planning approach was never ultimately killed, he said, but died off through "suffocation" as the federal and provincial governments gradually backed out of funding commitments.
     
    Toronto's oft-maligned Gardiner Expressway is another example of a curtailed Canadian freeway project. However, its marginal usefulness in managing some traffic has turned it into what Leo described as "a really big and knotty political problem that nobody seems to know the answer to."
     
    Vancouver's former chief planner Brent Toderian used the term "almost scandalous" to describe the lengthy debate over the Gardiner's future, adding the public money spent on the issue amounts to failure.
     
     
    "It's a political decision," he said. "It's essentially incontrovertible city-making evidence running up against politics."
     
    Toderian said that as cities such as Vancouver and Halifax re-imagine their downtown spaces, they face "possibly the most powerful city-making moments in the Canadian urban landscape."
     
    "These opportunities are too important to squander with even an average result," he said, citing Montreal's Bonaventure Expressway as another example that amounts to a white elephant of infrastructure from the past.
     
    "It starts with tearing them down," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Dollar Drops, Toronto Stock Exchange Plunges As Oil Plummets To Below US$38 A Barrel

    Dollar Drops, Toronto Stock Exchange Plunges As Oil Plummets To Below US$38 A Barrel
    The price of oil also dropped $2.25 to US$37.85 a barrel, falling to levels not seen since the 2008 financial crisis roiled world markets.

    Dollar Drops, Toronto Stock Exchange Plunges As Oil Plummets To Below US$38 A Barrel

    Critics Pan New Bill That Raises Jaywalking Fines To Nearly $700 In Nova Scotia

    Critics Pan New Bill That Raises Jaywalking Fines To Nearly $700 In Nova Scotia
    HALIFAX — A bill that increases the fine for jaywalking in Nova Scotia to nearly $700 is being roundly criticized by active transportation advocates and pedestrians alike.

    Critics Pan New Bill That Raises Jaywalking Fines To Nearly $700 In Nova Scotia

    Canada's Beef, Pork Sectors Cheer Wto Decision In Meat Labelling Dispute

    Canada's Beef, Pork Sectors Cheer Wto Decision In Meat Labelling Dispute
    OTTAWA — Canada's beef and pork sectors are welcoming a World Trade Organization ruling that allows Canada and Mexico to impose $1 billion in annual tariffs on U.S. products.

    Canada's Beef, Pork Sectors Cheer Wto Decision In Meat Labelling Dispute

    ISIL Are 'Rerrible Terrorists,' But Justin Trudeau Says CF-18s Will Still Come Home

    ISIL Are 'Rerrible Terrorists,' But Justin Trudeau Says CF-18s Will Still Come Home
    Interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose says the extremists who have overrun vast swaths of Syria and Iraq are part of a death cult that sells women and children into sexual slavery and murders religious minorities.

    ISIL Are 'Rerrible Terrorists,' But Justin Trudeau Says CF-18s Will Still Come Home

    Indigenous Affairs Minister To Address Missing, Murdered Women Inquiry Tuesday

    Indigenous Affairs Minister To Address Missing, Murdered Women Inquiry Tuesday
    OTTAWA — Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett is set to make an announcement Tuesday on the subject of the promised inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women.

    Indigenous Affairs Minister To Address Missing, Murdered Women Inquiry Tuesday

    Shelter Project For Indian-Origin Elders In New Zealand Launched

    Shelter Project For Indian-Origin Elders In New Zealand Launched
    A non-profit organisation in New Zealand has launched an emergency shelter project for senior citizens from the Indian and South Asian communities who are at risk of being abused, or in dire need of emergency housing

    Shelter Project For Indian-Origin Elders In New Zealand Launched