Transcript Slide 1

The Toronto Region in Question:
What kind of Region are we
Building?
Context, Trends, Challenges and Futures
Larry S. Bourne FRSC MCIP
Cities Centre
University of Toronto
29 November 2011
Outline
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Premises: Starting points
The Toronto Region: Context and Attributes
City/Region successes
Trends: Patterns and The dynamics
Selected issues and challenges
Alternative Visions
Key planning issues
Uncertainties
Alternative Futures A) The region B) Urban form
Premises:
Starting points: Region building
• The central city cannot be divorced from its region, and vice versa
• Understanding the development of a city region requires integration of
various components of growth: 1)the regional economy; 2) the
demographic system and social change; 3) infrastructure and the built
environment; 4) the state, policies and politics, and civil society
• Development (and investment) tends to shift back and forth between old
and new areas (eg capital switching); but growth has been the dominant
paradigm
• The spatial form of the region is the outcome of the interactions of these
components in particular places and at specific times, plus (of course)
accidents (eg Hurricane Hazel)
• We know relatively little about these interactions and thus about the
underlying dynamics of urban development
• Thus, we have little sense of what kind of region we are building
• Boundaries of urban regions, especially growing ones, are by definition
fuzzy and elastic
The Toronto region:
Context and attributes
• Toronto’s history and attributes reflect its changing position in the
Canadian urban system
• The region is characterized by its large size and complexity as a socioeconomic system
• Rapid growth over the post-war period (population x3; built environment
x5)
• A relatively diverse economic base
• Increasing affluence – eg increased space consumption
• Population growth is increasingly driven by immigration (net domestic
migration is negative)
• Resulting in a massive and unprecedented social transformation
• Massive decentralization, but with selected centralization and limited
nodal development
• Political ossification/contrasting with dynamic civil society
City/regional successes
• Accommodating rapid and sustained population and economic growth,
with continued high quality of life
• Adapting to an unprecedented socio-cultural transformation (high
tolerance level or good luck)
• Maintaining a relatively high quality base of infrastructure, social services
and public spaces (but currently under stress)
• Developing a tightly planned urban form (at the local level, less so at the
regional level)
• Encouraging a relatively healthy central area and downtown core (in terms
of jobs and a process of repopulation)
• Building the 3rd largest transit system in North America (including GO)
• Nurturing a rich foundation of civic organizations – social and cultural
• Recent regional planning initiatives (eg Places to Grow, Greenbelt,
Metrolinx)
Patterns and Trends;
Population and Employment
Selected issues and challenges:
A clustered top-10 list
• Economic development: restructuring, creative destruction
and regional coordination
• Congestion, transit provision and the infrastructure gap
• Social cohesion, inequalities, low-income, housing
• Maintaining the quality of public services and spaces
• The demographic transition, aging, living arrangements
• Environmental sustainability and the regional ecology
• Human capital, skills and education
• Crime and safety
• Governance: local democracy and regional institutions
• Regulation of development: sprawl etc
Corresponding alternative visions
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The competitive/entrepreneurial city
The efficient city and region
The equitable city
The public city
The socially inclusive city
The sustainable city
The knowledge-based creative city
The safe city
The democratic city
The compact and higher density city
Some key planning issues
• Density: population density by itself is not a
sufficient metric
– Changes in residential densities are driven not only by
dwelling design and built form but by demographic
structure and choices of living arrangements (e.g. smaller
households, aging population)
– The Toronto region already has high average (net) densities
by NA standards
– New suburbs are amongst the most dense on the
continent, despite mandated open spaces and
demographic thinning (eg reduced household size)
Planning issues 2
• The real problem in terms of land utilization and
urban form is three-fold:
– Non-residential uses: commercial, industrial, distribution
(logistics) and recreational; the densities of which have
been declining
– The tendency in new suburban areas to create large blocks
of single and or related uses, making it difficult to link
origins and destinations while limiting the flexibility to
adapt the future landscape to new demands
– The lack of coordination between transportation and land
use, particularly transit (present or future) and our
inability to require that development approvals are
conditional on regional transportation investments
Key challenges by Zone/Area
• The central area and waterfront: opportunities and capacity
constraints
• Retrofitting the older inner suburbs: for whom?
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rebalancing housing, services and jobs
Upgrading services; in-fill housing or redevelopment?
Improving local transit service (eg busways; rail corridors)
Integrating local and regional transit (eg GO and the TTC)
• Redesigning the suburban/exurban fringe: but how?
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Building in more flexibility in development formats
Creating more mixed use areas (but at what scale?)
Linking transportation and land use decisions
Encouraging inter-municipal coordination in investment
Maintaining the commitment to regional planning initiatives
Regional uncertainties?
• The global economy; capital flows, trade, manufacturing
• Employment losses and regional decentralization
• A continuation of population growth? – the immigration
question and the impact of demographic change
• Spatial inequality and social polarization – what effect on
social cohesion?
• Infrastructure investment linked to the rate of urban growth?
• Intergovernmental cooperation and the role of the province
• Volatile energy and commodity prices
• The housing bubble and land markets
• Available fiscal resources
Alternative Urban futures:
A) The Toronto region in the urban
system
• global city status; + high quality of life
• Continued (but likely slower) growth and
national prominence
• Moderate growth ( some loss of relative
position in the North American urban
hierarchy) and pressure on social services
• Very slow growth
• Relative decline (eg Detroit north)
Alternative urban futures:
B) Regional urban form
• More of the same (BAU)
• Further decentralization and dispersal of jobs and population (around a
strong central core)
• Increased centralization/ multiple higher density nodes
– Typically for residential nodes
– Low-density commercial/ some employment nodes
• The high-rise city region
• All of the above, but with differences by economic sector, population subgroup and location within the region
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• Why more of the same?: Inertia, of policy, practices and perceptions; path
dependency; the huge scale of embedded or sunk costs; institutional
rigidity and political fragmentation – all of which inhibit innovation and
experimentation and adapting to change
• Why not more of the same?
What can we do?
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Enhance the sense of a region; develop a strong regional voice (at present no one
is home); encourage regional collective action and more informed decision-making
Broaden the focus of debate from specific sectors and components of growth to
incorporate and integrate the main drivers of growth and change
Rebalance the primacy assigned to short-term (political) goals toward longer term
(strategic) goals
Recognize the complexity of the regional urban system and the rapidity of change
(the dynamics of the system)
Establish a GTA monitoring system with research capacity and real time data, to
focus on the dynamics of the system – ie where the city region is going rather than
where it has been
Encourage incorporation of a greater degree of flexibility in the planning and
design of new communities
Argue for (and provide rationale and evidence for) enhanced investment in
physical and social infrastructure (eg through higher taxes; higher user rates;
strategic investment partnerships)
Revisit (re-vision?) the kind of city region that we want
Thanks
• Further reading:
– Anything by the Neptis Foundation (The Architecture of
Urban Regions); Board of Trade; TCF; MPI, etc
– A. Sorensen ‘Toronto Megacity: Growth, Planning
Institutions and Sustainability’ in A. Sorensen and J. Okata
eds Megacities (Springer 2011)
– L.S.Bourne, J. Britton and D. Leslie ‘The Greater Toronto
Region: The Challenges of Economic Restructuring, Social
Diversity and Globalization’ in L.S.Bourne et al eds.
Canadian Urban Regions Trajectories of growth and
Change Oxford University Press 2011)