I’ve long considered Montreal & Vancouver to be “mirror image” top design cities, as they are good at different things (& thus could REALLY learn from each other)! For example, Vancouver could learn A LOT from Montreal about public realm design/investment & street transformation.
How are Vancouver & Montreal good at different city-building things? I think with urban design, Vancouver has been better at negotiating good design from developers (a city BY design), & Montreal is better at public sector design (a city OF design).

Read: planetizen.com/node/23462
Just stop & think about this — what if YOUR city transformed a key main street (like Montreal has with #MontRoyal, actually one of TEN such street transformations this summer) into a 2.5km long pedestrian promenade & living room with 2700 seats? Thanks for the tip @JeanBeaudoin_!
Montreal does urban parks REALLY well, & people clearly LOVE the new Place Fleurs-de-Macadam right on pedestrianized Avenue Mont-Royal. A packed “water square” with interactive water & on-site rain management, “cloudy” art feature & great seating all on a former gas station site.
One of Canada’s more intriguing waterfront transformations, the ongoing evolution of Montreal’s Old Port lands into an urban residential neighbourhood by Canada Lands Company, fuelled by a $50 million infrastructure investment. I have compliments & critiques — what do YOU think?

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More from @BrentToderian

Jun 11
“In Finland, the # of homeless people has fallen sharply. Those affected receive a small apartment & counselling with no preconditions. 4 out of 5 people affected make their way back into a stable life. And all this is CHEAPER than accepting homelessness.” scoop.me/housing-first-…
I’ll keep tweeting this one until I don’t have to tweet it anymore.
Finland’s success with solving homelessness isn’t because its scale or population size is different than where you live. Approaches and solutions like this are, in most cases, scalable. Finland’s success is because its values and priorities are different than where you live. Image
Read 5 tweets
May 20
Since I’m talking about urban leadership, let’s talk more specifically about what @Anne_Hidalgo has done in Paris.

She used periodic pilots opening up streets to people, focussing on air pollution, health and quality of life. When people liked it, she built on that success. 1/
Paris Mayor @Anne_Hidalgo did the same thing with bike lanes— some pilots to prove they worked, but quickly making them permanent & decisively expanding on them during the pandemic when they were well received. Don’t ask if folks want something that they can’t picture. Show them.
For the water edge transformation of the Seine, closing road space to cars & creating a great place for people, the previous mayor started that, but @ANNE_Hidalgo fought to keep it (including in court), made it permanent & expanded it. It set the tone for a lot that followed. 3/
Read 5 tweets
Apr 20
THREAD: I’m going to try this thread to clearly state my perspective on electric vehicles, car dependency and better cities, to those who frequently ask me, including media, elected leaders and many others. Here goes. Please share if you think it helps. 🧵#EVS
To be clear, despite the complexities, problems & grey areas that make electric vehicles much more complicated than the “silver bullets” many claim them to be, I DO support the replacement of ICE vehicles with EVs. It will take longer and be more complicated than boosters think.
But it’s important to understand what #EVs WON’T do, that we STILL badly need solutions for.

We know FOR SURE that EV cars, trucks & SUVs still badly pollute from manufacturing, brakes & tires, creating serious health issues, even IF the energy source is renewable (many aren’t).
Read 15 tweets
Feb 22
THREAD: For decades, I’ve been making the undeniable case that cities & city-regions need healthy downtowns, including economically (since inner cities subsidize suburbs). EVERYONE benefits from a healthy downtown no matter where you live & work, and whether you ever go downtown.
We’ve already been having a LOT of discussions about the urgent need for smart strategies to keep downtowns healthy coming out of the global pandemic, in the face of shockwaves including uncertain new realities around working from home, and many implications for downtown health.
In recent weeks, we’ve witnessed ANOTHER major threat to the health of downtowns — the idea that prolonged extremist occupations, with or without trucks, could render downtowns at least temporarily unlivable, and questionable places to run businesses.

That should concern us ALL.
Read 8 tweets
Nov 10, 2021
This is important for #COP26

A while back, I received a note from a Manager in the executive office of @BillGates, asking if they could send me a copy of his new book “How To Avoid A Climate Disaster: The Solutions We Have and the Breakthroughs We Need.” I was happy to say yes.
She wrote: “Our aim is to get the book into the hands of as many people working to prevent a #climatecrisis as possible. It’s an issue that affects us all; the more conversations we can help start about the way we work together to get to zero, the better.”

I couldn’t agree more.
I generally respect Bill Gates’ intentions in putting his energies into trying to make things better in the world. Putting aside the usual (& completely correct) comments about how billionaires should be taxed more, it’s a lot more than most billionaires are doing.

However…
Read 18 tweets
Oct 23, 2021
One of the biggest municipal public policy mistakes I see happening in many cities is a political tendency to focus almost entirely on the construction of below-market housing when trying to tackle “affordability.” Affordability is complex, & solutions need to be equally complex.
For example, if local politicians send the message that they don’t want to see new ownership housing, or even market rental housing, because “what we REALLY need are below-market homes,” the resulting supply slowdown means ownership & rental housing will get even MORE expensive.
“In America, housing is a commodity to be bought and sold like a car. The result is that those with means have a place to live, and those without means do not. We must change this paradigm.” — former San Francisco chief planner John Rahaim. @HarvardGSD
gsd.harvard.edu/2021/06/john-r…
Read 4 tweets

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