Toronto Star

A GREENER TOMORROW

An architect and planner describes plan to put a park atop the east Gardiner Expressway,

- DAVID RIDER CITY HALL BUREAU CHIEF

It might be the best, and greenest, east Gardiner Expressway that Toronto never had. City staff recently reviewed five proposals including the “Green Gardiner,” an ambitious plan to reroute the eastern end of the highway in close alignment with the rail corridor, and cover that with a long, narrow park. Architect and planner Calvin Brook of Brook McIlroy Inc. gives us his pitch.

What, in a nutshell, is your proposal?

The Gardiner from Cherry to Jarvis Sts. would be rebuilt on top of the railway. You’re really taking two barriers between downtown and the water — the Gardiner and the railway — and consolidat­ing it in one narrow strip. On top of the Gardiner would be a 1.1-kilometre linear park, like a vast green roof. That frees up Lake Shore Blvd. to become a normal, beautiful waterfront boulevard that everyone has always aspired to. It also frees up a whole swath of cityowned land on the north side for mixed-use developmen­t. East of that, the link to the DVP is the same as the city’s “hybrid No. 3” option.

So the roadway above the rail tracks becomes like an above-ground tunnel. What happens in the park on top?

It would be entirely public space — bike lanes, walkways, all the same kinds of things we see in the High Line in New York. Landscapin­g, mature trees — a linear park connecting the St. Lawrence, Market District and Distillery neighbourh­oods, and waterfront pedestrian and cycling connection­s. There would be multiple access points, ramps and urban stairs, for maximum north-south permeabili­ty.

City staff declined to recommend the Green Gardiner as an option for council to consider, except in the long term. Reasons included a “lengthy and uncertain” approvals process to cover the rail corridor and an estimated $735-million cost on top of rebuilding and reconfigur­ing the “hybrid” east Gardiner.

With all due respect to the city, I do not understand the numbers they’re using at all. They were a total surprise to us. The price that they’re allocating for that eastern segment — rebuilding the connection from the Don to Cherry St., demolishin­g the Gardiner in that new segment, building a new bridge and reconstruc­ting Lake Shore Blvd., is $265 million. In our segment, about 1.1 kilometres, they’re ascribing a cost of $735 million. Also, their number doesn’t take into account revenues from city and (provincial) Metrolinx land freed up for developmen­t.

So is there any chance Torontonia­ns will be able to stroll barefoot through grass on top of the Gardiner?

Absolutely. I’m not giving up. Some people think these projects are a far-out idea, but it’s actually really commonplac­e. What’s interestin­g is these types of (platform) projects happening in New York are being done by Canadians — Oxford (Properties) is doing Hudson Yards and Brookfield (Properties) is doing Manhattan West.

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 ?? BROOK MCILROY INC. ?? The Green Gardiner project envisions rebuilding the elevated expressway over the railway between Cherry and Jarvis Sts.
BROOK MCILROY INC. The Green Gardiner project envisions rebuilding the elevated expressway over the railway between Cherry and Jarvis Sts.
 ??  ?? Calvin Brook is an architect, urban designer and planner and co-founder of Brook McIlroy.
Calvin Brook is an architect, urban designer and planner and co-founder of Brook McIlroy.

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