Editor's Picks + Features

96981468_a0f0402afb

My Toronto Video Contest Voting Page

Example description of page.

4843752478_f5b5e2cc1b_b

A 72 Year Crossing at Yonge and Bloor

"A 72 Year Crossing at Yonge and Bloor" Comparative...

4837950162_c923bb1d6e

STREET SCENE: Linux Cafe

Street Scene will appear each week showcasing the...

IMG_0702

Farm Friday: Evergreen Brick Works

Name: Evergreen Brick Works Farmers' Market Location:...

4662198802_8615cf0d2d_b

SPACING VOTES WEEKLY: Coach Ford, Smitherman walks & a heated TV debate

EDITOR’S NOTE: Spacing Votes — our dedicated 2010...

spacing-radio-votes-smither

SPACING RADIO: Smitherman talks walking, while walking

LISTEN TO THIS SPACING RADIO PODCAST George Smitherman...

congestion_referendum

IDEAS FOR TORONTO: Infrastructure referendums

The Toronto City Summit Alliance held a roundtable...

4790754465_e783015c3d_z

Bike parking takes over car parking spaces

Toronto bike riders can celebrate a "first" today:...

4706528245_ef676de151_b

Cities for People — New Toronto design intervention

This is part of a series of posts by students in...

3677103134_da0a274434_z

LORINC: Greenwashing by any other name

I normally have a lot of time for the Toronto Environmental...

4814694220_7da9ea9331

World Wide Wednesday: Maps, Trains, Trikes and Three Million on the A40

Each week we will be focusing on blogs from around...

Spacing Saturday

Every Saturday, we highlight recent posts from across Spacing’s blog network in Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, and the Atlantic region.

• The opening of the The Halifax Urban Greenway's (HUG), first path has been bittersweet for the city's cyclist community . As Spacing's Mark Lasanowski explains, while cyclists have been campaigning for the new multi-modal path for nearly a decade, the presence of signs stating that “cyclists are required to dismount at all intersections" makes it an impractical options for many riders.

Sparked by a Dalhousie School of Planning conference, titled Play! Spacing's Alison Creba attempts to unpack what "play" really means in an urban context. Creba discovers that the concept is not as easily understood as one might think as "..it requires a discussion of the types of activities that engage individuals, and demands that we honestly consider what playful acts look like, what enables them, and how they manifest themselves".

• McGill Urban Geography student Daniel Rotsztain writes a guest column on how the city’s unusually mild winter and the associated rise in all-season cyclists revealed weaknesses in the city's bike path program. Rotsztain argues that inflexibility of bike lanes in the face of winter conditions and inadequate all-season maintenance worked to create a hazardous environment for the city's winter riders.

• Spacing's Jacob Larsen takes us through yet another development in the ongoing battle over the future of Montreal’s Turcot interchange. In response to citizen objections the MTQ has revised the original plan saving 60 dwellings on the rue Cazelaiswill from demolition.

A short colour film, shot by Montreal streetcar operator Lucien Dauphinais in the late 1950s, follows Ottawa's old streetcars as they navigate the city's roads and avenues. Check out Spacing Ottawa for this glimpse into the city's transit past.

• Spacing Ottawa's Tonya Davidson looks at Canada’s centennial celebrations and the urban legacy left behind. From monuments, to arenas to UFO landing pads, Davidson shows how the country's extravagant 100-year birthday forever changed the shape of our cities.

• As part of an ongoing collaboration with the NFB, Spacing Toronto has posted an Oscar-nominated animated short from 1966 entitled "What on Earth!". The short film, the work of Les Drew and Kaj Pindal, shows Earth through the eyes of visiting extraterrestrials who, confronted with automobiles everywhere they look "understandably assume they are the dominant race".

• Spacing contributor Marcus Bowman examines a report released by the Clean Air Partnership that challenges the commonly held assumption that bike lanes on arterial roads are bad for business.

photo by Mark Lasanowski from Spacing Atlantic

 

Comments

Neither the author nor Spacing necessarily agree with the comments posted below. Spacing reserves the right to edit or delete comments entirely. See our Comment Policy.

 
Post a comment
Spacing Saturday
By