When you talk about density in any north american city, you lay your political cards on the table.
In favour: You’re a downtown elitist and/or hippie.
Against: You’re a selfish suburbanite.
But, does this have to be the case? Don’t we all want to live in places that are safe, healthy, and sustainable? How can we find some common ground?
In this debate, it’s all a matter of context and perception. If you’re in favour of density, do you instinctively believe only central neighbourhoods can achieve this? If you can’t imagine living anywhere other than the suburbs, does this mean they must be built with winding roads and zoning by-laws separating housing from schools and businesses, with fewer people per block?
Intensifying our cities is about geometry: having enough people and services in a space to make it possible to get from home, to work, school, groceries, your local community centre and other services, with ease. Consequently, services (garbage pick-up, snow clearing, utilities) are more sustainable for the city to deliver, as more people and businesses are located within a smaller amount of space.
SAFETY IN SUBURBS
In the 1960s and 1970s, North American cities were undergoing a revolution. Personal wealth was increasing and new housing was going up along the edges of cities. The new housing was primarily single family occupancy with big yards, a dream for families who wanted to escape apartment living to have space for their kids to play outside in the safety of a fenced yard. The idea of safety is fundamental. Ask any suburbanite why they live in the ‘burbs, and I bet you the word “safety” will come up in the first few sentences.
But what does “safety” actually mean? Usually the perception is that areas with more people in them mean the likelihood of being a victim of a crime is higher. What this method of thinking ignores, however, are the factors which most commonly lead to injury or early death. In Canada, we are far more likely to die in a car crash, or from the results of a car-dependent lifestyle (obesity, diabetes, asthma etc), than of crime. So, while many people purchase housing in the suburbs with a high emphasis on safety, the reality is they are increasing their likelihood of injury and early death due to car-dependency.
Side note: it’s important to grasp that crime rates have dramatically decreased since the 1960s. It’s true that Canadian cities are struggling with addictions to fentanyl and meth; however, it’s so important to grasp that addiction has no borders. It’s true that in wealthier neighbourhoods, the pains of addiction can remain behind closed doors for longer (and access to credit means less likelihood of seeing addiction on the streets), but it’s quite unfair to assume building for density means increasing crime.
BUILDING BLOCKS FOR GROWTH
Reducing density and zoning away from mixed use means your home isn’t located near the grocery store, which is also not located near your kid’s school. You have to get from zone to zone multiple times a day, which increases the need for a vehicle. Car dependency is a snowball, as more personal vehicles increases the need for space in each zone for parking, which means there are more cars on the roads between, so those roads also need to grow and now you have to have a wider, longer road and the pressure to travel it quicker in order to get to the things you need, which are now further apart. And all of this travelling must still be done within the timeframe of your day.
Citizens who do want buck the trend and embrace healthy, sustainable commuting, soon discover when walking, biking, and/or busing, they are now much lower on the “priority pyramid” which places the convenience of those personal vehicles well ahead of the comfort and safety of those who want to bus, bike or walk. Why do cities make it so easy to choose the mode of travel that is the most expensive, dangerous and unsustainable?
RETROFITTING TIME
It’s time to rethink our suburbs! While cities might have made errors in zoning by-laws and parking requirements in the past, that is not to say we can’t have a healthier and greener suburban neighbourhoods in our future. Ellen Dunham-Jones delivered a fantastic TED Talk, Retrofitting Suburbia, on the incredible potential our suburbs have to grow into liveable, sustainable places. She sees:
“a tremendous opportunity to take our least-sustainable landscapes right now and convert them into more sustainable places. And in the process, what that allows us to do is to redirect a lot more of our growth back into existing communities that could use a boost, and have the infrastructure in place, instead of continuing to tear down trees and to tear up the green space out at the edges.”
WALKABILITY
Times are changing, and it’s important for our suburban communities to keep up with changing demographics and priorities. In Canada, fewer young people are getting their driver’s licenses and purchasing cars, while young people are reporting their desire to live in neighbourhoods where they can walk, bus and bike to work. At the same time, our aging demographic is creating demand for places to downsize to within established neighbourhoods.
Not only do our cities need to be places that will attract people, especially young people, but most importantly they need to be places that support our health. Elsevier published the study City sustainability: the influence of walkability on built environments in 2017 and stated:
“A vital issue in community is providing an easy access to the transport network for different range of community members such as; very young, old, children and disabled people. The functions that walking and walkable area can be support includes community involvement, health, meeting and gathering and recreation which has positive effects on sustainability and vice versa. Walkability is the basis of sustainable city. The same as bicycling, walking can be known as ‘green’ type of transportation which except crowding reduction and also has low level of environmental influence, energy conserving without any air and noise pollution.”
In Canada, our need to incorporate routine physical activity into our daily lives is vital. This June, Canadian children received a D+ ranking for physical activity, and almost half of Canadian adults aren’t moving enough to benefit their health. (Not so) Fun Fact: this inactivity is estimated to cost the Canadian economy 6.8 BILLION dollars in 2009! (A Common Vision for increasing physical activity and reducing sedentary living in Canada: Let’s Get Moving).
The great thing is, we don’t have to invent a new way of building to achieve successful, walkable neighbourhoods. We were building for walkability in our cities until zoning by-laws and parking requirements forced urban planning to reorganize. Think about successful strips in your home city. In Winnipeg, we have Corydon, The Exchange, Wolseley and Deer Lodge: communities built on a grid, with schools and businesses within comfortable walks, and easy access to transit. If our city requires new development to follow the same pattern, new developments will have the building blocks for walkability.
By intensifying our landscape, we will invite citizens to choose healthy modes of travel. “Urban density helps ensure that people choosing to bike to their destinations can reach shops and services needed as part of their daily lives within a reasonably bikeable distance. Those people in turn provide the loyal customers that local businesses need to ensure their viability and create local jobs,” says Mark Cohoe, Executive Director of Bike Winnipeg.
Joseph Kornelsen of Functional Transit Winnipeg highlights how difficult it will be to have a functional transit system in a sprawling city.
“Density and public transit go hand-in-hand, both reinforce the other. When there’s more stuff and people on relatively smaller parcels of land, you need a mode of transportation that moves more people with less space — you need a bus. Alternatively, when folks are traveling by bus, they are almost always going to be a pedestrian at one end of that trip and the most walkable neighbourhoods are ones where everything is close together – you need high density.”
Sprawling neighbourhoods with long walks to the bus stop, and bus routes which wind and meander around Bays and Drives, add precious time to commutes, making the bus an uninviting, inconvenient mode of transport.
NOT IN MY BACKYARD
Going back to the top of this post, about how individuals often react to word “density”, we tend to hear these types of “old” neighbourhoods are unappealing for those in the suburbs. Words like “squishy”, “dangerous”, “sardines” are often used by those in the suburbs to describe core neighbourhoods.
But is this reality?
I was giving this some thought over the holiday break. I come from a teeny, tiny rural Manitoba town (I had FIVE kids in my class until high school, where I graduated with 15 …), and since moving to Winnipeg for school, I’ve always lived “downtown” (cue the ominous drumroll).
Here’s my observation: living in various central neighbourhoods over the last 15 years, is a lot like small-town living. You know your neighbours, you can walk to get milk, you patronize lots of small, family-style restaurants and independent shops, and you can live your daily life without a car.
I was stuck: how to make the perks of this style of living click with those who unconsciously associate central neighbourhoods with being unappealing. And then it clicked!
HALLMARK CHRISTMAS MOVIES!
While walking my dog around my wee (teeny tiny, super cute) small town, I realized that Winnipeg is now playing host to an ever-growing number of Christmas movies. And let’s be honest, don’t these films play into that magical fantasy of the life most people aspire to?
Where in Winnipeg do these movies typically film? Check-out the locations, and you will find dense, walkable neighbourhoods serve as the locale for whatever holiday fantasy is filming (think Westgate, Waterfront, Wolseley, the East and West Exchange).
And of course, we can’t ALL live in these neighbourhoods, but our city can require neighbourhoods being built to follow the basic building blocks of Hallmark fantasies: walkability. Storefronts, nice sidewalks, convenient transit, and opportunities to get everywhere we need to go with options beyond just personal vehicles.
The City of Winnipeg is looking to implement a Infill Strategy, and the timing couldn’t be more perfect. In Brent Bellamy’s article Winnipeg Needs An Infill-Strategy Roadmap, he notes:
Winnipeg’s residential infill strategy is a valuable initiative, but it will fall short without public support or political champions. The city is currently undertaking a comprehensive review of Winnipeg Transit service, the OurWinnipeg plan and the second phase of impact fees. This presents a unique opportunity to dovetail an infill strategy with these other policies to set Winnipeg on a progressive development path for the future.
It’s time for all Winnipeggers to engage in the discussion around density. Most importantly, it’s time to check our language and assumptions when it comes to living in the urban core and the suburbs. At the end of the day, we all want to live in a healthy, sustainable city where we can live our daily lives with ease. Let’s all work together to make it happen in every neighbourhood!
Great Blog. I note that The Exchange is listed as a success. It has the potential to be a success, but as someone who walks that area in the winter to shop – I would say the priority of snow clearance on the road versus the sidewalk, prevents it from being a success. My sidewalks can be icy and rutted up, and yet the road will be bare. This tells me that many merchants would prefer I get a car and drive through, rather than walk and shop. There are a few merchants who clear their sidewalks. Most do not, and it is not a priority for the City of Winnipeg. Build it AND MAINTAIN IT, and they will come.
Great notes, Maureen! At this point, I don’t think any neighbourhood in Winnipeg is a success in winter, as we haven’t seen the city implement the new snow clearing strategy for sidewalks and bike lanes. This winter the Exchange did have some funds to test out snow clearing equipment on the new lanes there, so hopefully that data will serve to benefit the overall strategy. I can’t wait to live in a city that values people who move around via transit, walking and biking as much as those who use a personal vehicle. We’re a long way away ….
Ugh, this ^! I had to report an uncleared – like never this winter- sidewalk to the city a month after it should have been donex and follow up 3 times before it was finally actioned…less than a week before all the snow melted. Seems like Exch Dist Biz should have been monitoring and reporting that, but as you said, business seems to prioritize drivers. So frustrating.
THIS^!!! So true this winter. The north side sidewalk of McDermot between Rorie and Waterfront was seemingly never cleared after early Feb. snow. I had to report it to the city via Twitter and follow up twice before they finally plowed it…less than a week before all the snow there melted anyway. It had goat trails through the snow and the back-in parkers were backing up over it. I would have expected the Exchange District biz to monitor and report these issues, but as you said, it all seems to be car-focused. So frustrating!!
Hi Erin – yeah, that’s very frustrating for sure. The good folks of the Exchange Biz are fantastic allies in the quest to improve the experience for pedestrians, but it can certainly be an overwhelming fight. We have so far to go and we have to all connect with our Councillors regularly to advocate for change!
Great blog, Mel!
As a city planner, when I’ve spoken with developers, the primary reason they don’t build grid neighbourhoods anymore is because they are more expensive, requiring more linear infrastructure (roads, sewers, etc) per acre to service them. Grids are also not particularly conducive to accommodating stormwater retention ponds, especially naturally vegetated ones. They also historically completely obliterated the natural landscape (only 9 of 36 original creeks remain within Winnipeg). However, you are absolutely right that there are a lot of downsides to curvilinear suburban layouts.
One fairly new model that I think strikes a good balance is the fused grid model (see Wikipedia for a good summary). It combines some of the attributes of both grid and curvilinear street layouts. A fused grid provides grid-like connectivity for pedestrians and cyclists, but not for cars. This helps prioritize active transportation over driving, and prevents residential streets from being shortcuts for high-speed vehicular traffic. Some of these fused grid elements can be seen in our 1950s suburbs such as Garden City and Windsor Park, but to achieve their full potential, they could use a retrofit to add some density and pedestrian-oriented retail!
Great notes, Adam! I love being able to consider the natural habitat when building. I think it’s realizing that we need to dramatically reduce our driving mode share as it’s incredibly harmful to our health and to the natural environment too. Fused grids are indeed great, as long as citizens can easily get around to what they need without relying on driving everywhere.