I believe the builder is Luxuria (Same as Block 11B) as the DP is all one one chunk.
Going in to bloxk 11A (shown in blue)
Going in to bloxk 11A (shown in blue)
Being a regular visitor I can see the appeal of U/D. It's clean, safe and has a nice walkable atmosphere with a lot of good retail options, and even more to come.
I think this is a big part of it. Because it's so master planned, UD is perhaps a bit of an "urban experience" as opposed to something authentically urban, but it gives people enough of the positives aspects without having to deal with the known downsides of the inner city. It's basically EV without the risk/grit. For most people (especially seniors, moms, etc), it's more than worth the tradeoff.
Those are my two gripes. The cycle lane was a huge miss, but something that can still be rectified. My understanding is Max Orange will have stops right on the avenue, which will be nice.I can see why seniors and soccer moms in SUVs love it. If there was decent cycling infrastructure and better integration with the BRT, I would love it too. But all I see is the missed opportunities, I can't get excited about it.
My 13 year old son and his friends go there a fair bit to hang around and be urban. Definitely not the typical urban grit, but gives a certain kind of urban experience without the downsides of the urban experience. Oddly enough the lack of LRT might be part of the reason it feels safe. On several occasions I've lamented the fact that U/D not on an LRT line, and surprisingly many have told me they're glad it isn't.I think this is a big part of it. Because it's so master planned, UD is perhaps a bit of an "urban experience" as opposed to something authentically urban, but it gives people enough of the positives aspects without having to deal with the known downsides of the inner city. It's basically EV without the risk/grit. For most people (especially seniors, moms, etc), it's more than worth the tradeoff.
The train really does have that bad of a reputation... too bad. To what I've seen the University doesn't have a "downsides of the urban experience" issue and it is on the LRT line. Calgary Transit really needs to undertake a a campaign to improve the C-Train's perception.Oddly enough the lack of LRT might be part of the reason it feels safe. On several occasions I've lamented the fact that U/D not on an LRT line, and surprisingly many have told me they're glad it isn't.
My understanding is Max Orange will have stops right on the avenue, which will be nice.
Isn't there a MAX Orange stop already by the Children's Hospital? And they're adding a new stop in the heart of the district on a main street. There's spots to pick your battles and the roads in U/D are rarely congested that adding a dedicated lane and increasing cost for very marginal time benefit. And the cost for something always has to come from somewhere else.For a greenfield neighbourhood to be integrated with BRT, I want to see stops integrated into the ground floor of buildings (especially public buildings like the hospital), segregated lanes and/or signal priority, that type of integration. "You can take the bus there" is not the standard to get excited about.
Definitely a stop at the hospital. That's the one my son uses if they take the Max Orange. Someone posted a pic of a prep work for Max Orange stop in front of one of the buildings on University Ave (can't recall which building)Isn't there a MAX Orange stop already by the Children's Hospital? And they're adding a new stop in the heart of the district on a main street. There's spots to pick your battles and the roads in U/D are rarely congested that adding a dedicated lane and increasing cost for very marginal time benefit. And the cost for something always has to come from somewhere else.
It's unfortunate. I always think of the old expression 'perception is reality' My perception of the train has been fine, but I'm done with trying to convince people it's fine when they have a different perception. All it takes is a bad experience or a story of a bad experience and the damage is done.The train really does have that bad of a reputation... too bad. To what I've seen the University doesn't have a "downsides of the urban experience" issue and it is on the LRT line. Calgary Transit really needs to undertake a a campaign to improve the C-Train's perception.
Isn't there a MAX Orange stop already by the Children's Hospital? And they're adding a new stop in the heart of the district on a main street. There's spots to pick your battles and the roads in U/D are rarely congested that adding a dedicated lane and increasing cost for very marginal time benefit. And the cost for something always has to come from somewhere else.
I do believe that sidewalk is painted now, or it should be but the line just wore off over time. I do agree the Max stop should've been there from day 1, and I'm fairly certain if CTransit wanted a stop there, they could've stopped there from day 1, but they chose not to because the ridership figures weren't there, but that's more of a Transit decision. I don't think walking a bit for transit is considered prioritizing cars over transit. For transit to be efficient, it can't be doing little loops and turns into every stop.There is a MAX Orange stop by the Children's Hospital, but it's 200m outdoor walk from the front door, and includes a walk across a 15m wide access road with a high-speed turn and no painted crosswalk. In contrast, the (heated, enclosed) parking garage has a direct indoor connection. I had to take my son to the hospital for a non-urgent appointment a couple weeks ago and it was pretty obvious which transport mode is the default, easy, comfortable option, and which transport mode pays "the cost for something that has to come from somewhere else."
The same goes for U/D itself - heated, underground parking is conveniently integrated into the buildings, and was available (in surplus) from Day 1. Is a BRT stop conveniently integrated into the ground floor of the brand-new movie theatre? Nope, it's a 550m walk away, and maybe, if they get around to it, there will be a stop added after the fact, no doubt with plenty of compromises in favour of drivers.
Am I asking for too much? In our context, sure. U/D is better urbanism than the many forgettable suburban NW neighbourhoods that surround it in every direction. But it's not transit-friendly, it's not bike-friendly, and its success speaks more to the car-centric nature of the rest of the city than the place itself.
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