That's the series for now, but if you're hungry for smart Canadian focused stuff, here's what I've been watching: ruclips.net/video/7EYf-S5yTEk/видео.html - Uytae did a very funny video on the "sterile waterfront path" problem ruclips.net/video/-XiOkI_rmCE/видео.html - Urbanity moved back to MTL and got into the value aspect of what makes a city great for regular people ruclips.net/video/U3qeYRI34C8/видео.html - Reece got into the politics and economics that make our buses worse ruclips.net/video/D4oo_UE8lPY/видео.html - Shifter with practical advice for starting winter cycling ruclips.net/video/yB5E0bZad4I/видео.html - JJ does a real public service journo-explainer on Canadian Healthcare ruclips.net/video/v-OO9Sg6kF8/видео.html - Downie has been traveling around the world lately, but I really love this video retracing Vancouver history through a streetcar track ruclips.net/video/kV-T0eotrfk/видео.html - Plateau Astro takes a well known piece of art in Montreal and figures out what day it was drawn. Français ruclips.net/video/dswsj9TX3Kc/видео.html - Propos Montreal has a video where I cameo as Mark Twain from Star Trek TNG ruclips.net/video/ieVaq4pIPtU/видео.html - Capitaine Montreal m'a tenu compagnie ce mois-ci pendant mon "février français". Voici ma vidéo récente préférée. If you have any recommendations for other people living & making good stuff about Canada, feel free to post it below.
Ive loved the series! Please...please do a video on regional government vs higher levels dictating development policy... Even if it's just a historical look at Metro Toronto government instead of suggesting a future one. Also sorry for leaving at least one dickheaded comment on each vid....Fox gonna Fox 🦊
The facade of environmentalism but really they don’t want any change- in Toronto we are trying to densify in the core and build rapid transit but it’s being stalled literally for a handful of old trees by NIMBY types, but no complaints about taking down way more green lands and having people drive downtown. The priorities are asinine.
Honest NIMBYing isn’t all that popular, so there’s a million ways to justify not building anything anywhere near you with lofty-sounding goals and intangible complications. It’s not all that complicated, NIMBYs just don’t want to build.
They're also trying the Native American rights card to save those trees. I am not sure how valid that claim is, but I'm sure it's just a cover for simple Nimbyism.
Admittedly, I'm a little torn on this. Density is definitely needed, but people have also a need to connect to nature and a proximity to green spaces, and a big tree ads so much to a neighbourhood, like shade, a living space for many animals, etc. I also find it a bit hard to believe that we can't incorporate existing elements better into our city design, everything that existed has to be removed to start all over again each time. But some old industrial warehouses can be very cool spaces to develop, trees can be used to build courtyards around, heck, there's a plot of land that got developed close by with a natural spring that was incorporated into a natural water surface.
@@barvdwensity is the priority. You can build density, and then build parks and green space around it. Nature should be natural, or outside the cities. Sprawl is what kills nature. The least sprawl possible is the best outcome. Parks are good, but they shouldn't hinder mobility in a city by being overly big, and they CANNOT impede needed density. Parklets are fine, and you can fit them anywhere in a city, but real parks are found on the outskirts of cities, or outside them. If trees lining streets help cool them then that is good. Keep in mind cities are built for people, not trees. If 1 tree needs to be torn down so be it.
@@dylanc9174 I disagree. Stone deserts aren't just a horrible place to live (and thus very unattractive, meaning people actively avoid living there if they can), they are energetical, environmental and hydrological disasters. Just trying to keep an area covered in concrete dry after a downpour is a logistical nightmare, while it heats up like crazy as soon as the sun is out. We need inclusive construction, with trees to cool the streets, ditches and wadis to capture precipitation to fill the aquifers, as well as to avoid overflowing sewers, we need parks for kids to play and adults to walk, enjoy, etc. You can't build a city with only houses, you need schools, hospitals, shops, factories, heck, you even need theatres and amusement parks. Need, not want. And you need parks, too. This is not an argument against high-rises and density, or an argument for single-family home development, on the contrary. Again, I don't think a tree is sacred, and I dislike the kind of suburbanisation the US has made standard, this last century or so, with a passion. But we aren't separated from nature, we are part of it. Disallowing people that connection to nature is a recipe for even more depressions and unhappiness.
I love the spotlight (and criticism) that Hamilton's been getting in these recent videos. There's definitely a paradigm shift happening in the city atm, and also a huge push back from much of a city. I'm excited to see how things shake up but it's an uphill battle for sure.
Since I attended meetings for nearby developments, and observed some of the process, I realise how spot on he really is. It's everywhere. BC is full of NIMBYs. There is no new land out here unless it's owned by a developer - in which case, score, rezoned for high density in a transit free area! Everyone else? Single Family Zoning, no Duplex or Triplex or multi-plex.
Great video! I watch this at the exact moment I'm reviewing plans for a 2 story street oriented mixed use building at the edge of the "urban area" which had the surrounding suburban neighborhood up in arms suggesting the parking lot will be used for human trafficking and even had a police officer (who lives nearby) arguing against it because police driving by couldn't see the parking lot because it was behind the building!! 🤦♂️🤦♂️ Crap I've gotta deal with. I wouldn't say it's Hamilton Planners' fault there's so much low density crap. The developers are getting planning consultants to submit their plans, they're the ones with no vision (unless the planning consultant is getting paid to support high density, then you mr. Municipal Planner better get on board with supporting the developers vision or else you're obstructionist). The Hamilton Planners will be accused of not getting housing built fast enough of he demands the developer change their plans to high density and mixed use (plus also note they'll have to refund the application fees if not approved or denied in 90 days 🙃). But I'll give you credit, the vision needs to start with the official plan/ secondary plan which is primarily the municipality responsibility (unless again the developer lobbies for what they want in the policy plans).
The official and secondary plans are the problem. It was never possible for all this new greenfield turned to single residential not to be sprawl, that is by far the largest problem and 100% on the city. Developers usually squeeze every dollar they can out of land. If the rules define the ingredients as shit and bread, of course they're going to make a shit sandwich. The vision is the problem and that is the job of elected officials to make, the city to implement in policy and the developers to follow in building.
Damn dude, didn't know you visited The Hammer recently! Thank you so much for contextualizing all the hot mess from the past 6 months in Ontario. We need density ASAP, especially here in Hamilton, but everything moves at a glacial pace. And the by-laws aren't even the only issue - because of the absurd size of the city and the sheer amount of farmland, we have zone rating for property taxes, so that those with wells and septic tanks don't pay for sewers or transit. If you're still here, to see tons of super low density development, just take a peak along the south side of Rymal Road from Upper Paradise to Upper Centennial, as well as Binbrook and Ancaster.
Hope -> MAKE. I really like Hamilton, it just feels like it's not getting ahead of things. It's 2023, the urbanism gameplay is pretty well defined at this point. If you're in the area, the height limit downtown and land banking really stood out to me... also, drop by The North Fork, it's my regular when I'm in town and the owner is a gem.
I really wish these new greenbelt developments are walkable urban villages with a mix of housing types and shops centered around a train or bus rapid transit station. Instead they're going to be unwalkable suburbs located off freeway interchanges where everyone has to drive everywhere. At least they can be densified in the future!
Another source of corruption is when city governments expropriate many small contiguous parcels of undeveloped land, consolidate the parcels and then resell the consolidated land to developers.
Hamilton's new council and mayor push it in a more progressive direction, I have high hopes for this council to get serious on zoning and related items (parking minimums are such low hanging fruit). They currently seem more interested in political theatre with the province.
Unfortunately unless politicians stop thinking about appeasing the suburbia people and nimbys at the expense of proper housing and the public good change will be slow and it will continue to affect everyone at the expense of landlords and developers
Oh, you're just seeing the tip of the iceberg about just how bad Hamilton planning is... can't get anything good accomplished. And when something great is proposed after years of work, the build date is maybe 15 or more years away, so the plan will be watered down or scrapped in that time frame.
One of my most durable gripes is that “environmentalists” have absolutely no problem having the houses people need to live built in vast untouched natural (or agricultural) areas far out of their sight, as long as nothing is done to their neighbourhood. It’s dishonest, because it’s just NIMBYing in a tree costume.
That's the series for now, but if you're hungry for smart Canadian focused stuff, here's what I've been watching:
ruclips.net/video/7EYf-S5yTEk/видео.html - Uytae did a very funny video on the "sterile waterfront path" problem
ruclips.net/video/-XiOkI_rmCE/видео.html - Urbanity moved back to MTL and got into the value aspect of what makes a city great for regular people
ruclips.net/video/U3qeYRI34C8/видео.html - Reece got into the politics and economics that make our buses worse
ruclips.net/video/D4oo_UE8lPY/видео.html - Shifter with practical advice for starting winter cycling
ruclips.net/video/yB5E0bZad4I/видео.html - JJ does a real public service journo-explainer on Canadian Healthcare
ruclips.net/video/v-OO9Sg6kF8/видео.html - Downie has been traveling around the world lately, but I really love this video retracing Vancouver history through a streetcar track
ruclips.net/video/kV-T0eotrfk/видео.html - Plateau Astro takes a well known piece of art in Montreal and figures out what day it was drawn.
Français
ruclips.net/video/dswsj9TX3Kc/видео.html - Propos Montreal has a video where I cameo as Mark Twain from Star Trek TNG
ruclips.net/video/ieVaq4pIPtU/видео.html - Capitaine Montreal m'a tenu compagnie ce mois-ci pendant mon "février français". Voici ma vidéo récente préférée.
If you have any recommendations for other people living & making good stuff about Canada, feel free to post it below.
What? No.... What?? This is all... what???
Ive loved the series! Please...please do a video on regional government vs higher levels dictating development policy...
Even if it's just a historical look at Metro Toronto government instead of suggesting a future one.
Also sorry for leaving at least one dickheaded comment on each vid....Fox gonna Fox 🦊
The facade of environmentalism but really they don’t want any change- in Toronto we are trying to densify in the core and build rapid transit but it’s being stalled literally for a handful of old trees by NIMBY types, but no complaints about taking down way more green lands and having people drive downtown. The priorities are asinine.
Honest NIMBYing isn’t all that popular, so there’s a million ways to justify not building anything anywhere near you with lofty-sounding goals and intangible complications.
It’s not all that complicated, NIMBYs just don’t want to build.
They're also trying the Native American rights card to save those trees. I am not sure how valid that claim is, but I'm sure it's just a cover for simple Nimbyism.
Admittedly, I'm a little torn on this. Density is definitely needed, but people have also a need to connect to nature and a proximity to green spaces, and a big tree ads so much to a neighbourhood, like shade, a living space for many animals, etc.
I also find it a bit hard to believe that we can't incorporate existing elements better into our city design, everything that existed has to be removed to start all over again each time. But some old industrial warehouses can be very cool spaces to develop, trees can be used to build courtyards around, heck, there's a plot of land that got developed close by with a natural spring that was incorporated into a natural water surface.
@@barvdwensity is the priority. You can build density, and then build parks and green space around it. Nature should be natural, or outside the cities. Sprawl is what kills nature. The least sprawl possible is the best outcome.
Parks are good, but they shouldn't hinder mobility in a city by being overly big, and they CANNOT impede needed density. Parklets are fine, and you can fit them anywhere in a city, but real parks are found on the outskirts of cities, or outside them. If trees lining streets help cool them then that is good.
Keep in mind cities are built for people, not trees. If 1 tree needs to be torn down so be it.
@@dylanc9174 I disagree. Stone deserts aren't just a horrible place to live (and thus very unattractive, meaning people actively avoid living there if they can), they are energetical, environmental and hydrological disasters.
Just trying to keep an area covered in concrete dry after a downpour is a logistical nightmare, while it heats up like crazy as soon as the sun is out.
We need inclusive construction, with trees to cool the streets, ditches and wadis to capture precipitation to fill the aquifers, as well as to avoid overflowing sewers, we need parks for kids to play and adults to walk, enjoy, etc.
You can't build a city with only houses, you need schools, hospitals, shops, factories, heck, you even need theatres and amusement parks. Need, not want. And you need parks, too.
This is not an argument against high-rises and density, or an argument for single-family home development, on the contrary. Again, I don't think a tree is sacred, and I dislike the kind of suburbanisation the US has made standard, this last century or so, with a passion. But we aren't separated from nature, we are part of it. Disallowing people that connection to nature is a recipe for even more depressions and unhappiness.
So Hamilton is the Brossard of Montreal.
"Starts with a 'C'..." Hmm... "Candy-assed"? "Crappy"? "Cockamamie"? ... "Canadian"?
Have we entered Paige's daily video era?
… And it ended
...and it ended for 4 months...
I love the spotlight (and criticism) that Hamilton's been getting in these recent videos. There's definitely a paradigm shift happening in the city atm, and also a huge push back from much of a city. I'm excited to see how things shake up but it's an uphill battle for sure.
“Where’s the density dickheads” is potentially one of the most Paige lines you’ve ever put in a thing haha. Well done as always!
5:35 hey that's your bus again! Another hour!
Since I attended meetings for nearby developments, and observed some of the process, I realise how spot on he really is. It's everywhere. BC is full of NIMBYs. There is no new land out here unless it's owned by a developer - in which case, score, rezoned for high density in a transit free area! Everyone else? Single Family Zoning, no Duplex or Triplex or multi-plex.
Great video! I watch this at the exact moment I'm reviewing plans for a 2 story street oriented mixed use building at the edge of the "urban area" which had the surrounding suburban neighborhood up in arms suggesting the parking lot will be used for human trafficking and even had a police officer (who lives nearby) arguing against it because police driving by couldn't see the parking lot because it was behind the building!! 🤦♂️🤦♂️ Crap I've gotta deal with.
I wouldn't say it's Hamilton Planners' fault there's so much low density crap. The developers are getting planning consultants to submit their plans, they're the ones with no vision (unless the planning consultant is getting paid to support high density, then you mr. Municipal Planner better get on board with supporting the developers vision or else you're obstructionist). The Hamilton Planners will be accused of not getting housing built fast enough of he demands the developer change their plans to high density and mixed use (plus also note they'll have to refund the application fees if not approved or denied in 90 days 🙃). But I'll give you credit, the vision needs to start with the official plan/ secondary plan which is primarily the municipality responsibility (unless again the developer lobbies for what they want in the policy plans).
The official and secondary plans are the problem. It was never possible for all this new greenfield turned to single residential not to be sprawl, that is by far the largest problem and 100% on the city. Developers usually squeeze every dollar they can out of land. If the rules define the ingredients as shit and bread, of course they're going to make a shit sandwich.
The vision is the problem and that is the job of elected officials to make, the city to implement in policy and the developers to follow in building.
I love how I just recently discovered the channel right when your putting out videos left and right
wow 4 videos in a week from paige saunders, what a treat
Green belt being ripped out for dense neighbourhoods is good. But if you are going to replace it with single family zoning then it’s horrible
Damn dude, didn't know you visited The Hammer recently! Thank you so much for contextualizing all the hot mess from the past 6 months in Ontario. We need density ASAP, especially here in Hamilton, but everything moves at a glacial pace. And the by-laws aren't even the only issue - because of the absurd size of the city and the sheer amount of farmland, we have zone rating for property taxes, so that those with wells and septic tanks don't pay for sewers or transit.
If you're still here, to see tons of super low density development, just take a peak along the south side of Rymal Road from Upper Paradise to Upper Centennial, as well as Binbrook and Ancaster.
You're calling it like it is and I love it!
Hamiltons downtown does have lots of buildings planned in those parking lots!!! Lets just hope they get built 🥸
Hope -> MAKE.
I really like Hamilton, it just feels like it's not getting ahead of things. It's 2023, the urbanism gameplay is pretty well defined at this point.
If you're in the area, the height limit downtown and land banking really stood out to me... also, drop by The North Fork, it's my regular when I'm in town and the owner is a gem.
'Planned' can just be a way of squatting on land until speculation pumps the land price up.
I am not a fan of the "doing better next time" stage. 😞
Thanks for the great videos.
Thank you for your hard work Paige
I really wish these new greenbelt developments are walkable urban villages with a mix of housing types and shops centered around a train or bus rapid transit station. Instead they're going to be unwalkable suburbs located off freeway interchanges where everyone has to drive everywhere. At least they can be densified in the future!
Geez, I though that Sherbrooke was bad, but at the very least, there has been zoning reforms and the city is definitely getting denser.
Wow, just wow, every single video is better than the last, Subed to the pateron because wow wow wow
Thanks so much. Probably won’t have another video for a while, but that’s why it’s only pay per creation and you’ll be the first to know.
I hope you do reupload this in the future with more subs... these amazing videos can't be capped at a few thousand views
Another source of corruption is when city governments expropriate many small contiguous parcels of undeveloped land, consolidate the parcels and then resell the consolidated land to developers.
Thanks for still making great content Paige. I had to move back to Ottawa from Montreal last but I still love your content. You're great!
We gotta get Paige to 100k subs by the end of the year. This series is too good.
Look at what happened in Newfoundland to know how this will end.
Hamilton's new council and mayor push it in a more progressive direction, I have high hopes for this council to get serious on zoning and related items (parking minimums are such low hanging fruit). They currently seem more interested in political theatre with the province.
Unfortunately unless politicians stop thinking about appeasing the suburbia people and nimbys at the expense of proper housing and the public good change will be slow and it will continue to affect everyone at the expense of landlords and developers
Oh, you're just seeing the tip of the iceberg about just how bad Hamilton planning is... can't get anything good accomplished. And when something great is proposed after years of work, the build date is maybe 15 or more years away, so the plan will be watered down or scrapped in that time frame.
One of my most durable gripes is that “environmentalists” have absolutely no problem having the houses people need to live built in vast untouched natural (or agricultural) areas far out of their sight, as long as nothing is done to their neighbourhood.
It’s dishonest, because it’s just NIMBYing in a tree costume.
Ah yes build more suburbs that are net negative tax sinkholes.
Everything sucks and I hate it
Perhaps the tory was forced by the ford - and then the ford rolls into mayor's office....
Great video! Keep em coming!
Have you moved to Ontario? Or were you visiting for the series?
Just for the series, found bill 23 an interesting challenge to explain.
Love your content sir
6:04, hey i live there, yay me i guess
Let the greenbelt be.
I hate it here
10:36 Canadians love the cold, don’t they?
So confused about your accent. It sounds like an even mix of Canadian / American / NZ / Australian??
They're Ripping Up A Greenbelt
They're Ripping Up A Greenbelt
They're Ripping Up A Greenbelt for you and me
Oh Baby, you and me
Newwwww thumbnaaaaaaail
So glad I left Onterrible, such a dump!
Stop it
First!
Hamilton is a shit hole. Took them 23 years to bring a fucking go station to east Hamilton