CBBarnett
Senior Member
I grew up not far from this area, I recall the forests and narrow roads that was the 85th and 17th Avenue intersection. The thing I remember is that they were just quiet backroads with the aspen forests right next to them. Very pretty in the fall with the leaves changing, as in this aerial photo.Drove by on the weekend and was saddened to see what that area has become. Having lived near Aspen 13 years ago I remember how bucolic the acreages in the valley were. Now they just clearcut everything and left no aspens at all. Could they not have preserved some on the fringes between developments? Also the townhomes fronting 85th St. are just weird and seem unsafe.
Here's 2003:
Here again, 2023:
Yikes ..... that's a huge amount of forest destruction, massive re-grading the natural topography in the area, now complete with a hodge-podge of car-oriented neighbourhood designs and some massive Calgary-style arterial right-of-ways (some of which is width preserved for the LRT of course). I think 17th Avenue's width went up 3 - 5 fold in 20 years?
Doubly ironically, not only is the largest intact stand of forest is the future LRT site so will also be removed one day, but that LRT site itself is inconveniently located far from the density and the main intersection of 17th Avenue and 85th Street. The best TOD location in the area unfortunately went the route that many key areas do in our burbs - storm ponds.
All that said, people got to live somewhere and the overall area along 85th Street is hitting some other good marks for density, retail and design. But some painful lessons learned here too - we should do all we can to avoid this level of natural area destruction - it was such an asset that could have been leveraged and integrated into development, not just ignored and plowed under. From that lens this area's design and trajectory has not been a win.
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