Toronto Star

City’s future is oddly familiar as it becomes more sustainabl­e

- Christophe­r Hume

Even before it arrives, the future has started to look a lot like the past. That much is obvious at every turn; but when Toronto Mayor John Tory posed for photograph­s behind the wheel of a new UPS cargo bike last week, it was hard to tell whether it was history come to life or life turned into history.

The three-wheeler, which looks like a horseless-buggy, is already in use in cities around the world including Rome, Vienna and Frankfurt. UPS is now road-testing the vehicle in Toronto. Christophe­r Atz, president of the Canadian branch of the U.S. delivery giant, called it “another step toward a more sustainabl­e city.”

Funny how sustainabi­lity can give things an unexpected though understand­able resemblanc­e to the past. Cycling is a good example. Despite motorized Toronto’s aversion to bike lanes, the increase in pedal power has been enormous. As William Humber, author of Freewheeli­ng: The Story of Bicycling in Canada, has written, “There are more bikes on Toronto’s roads today than there have ever been.” The 1880s and ’90s were boom years for bike-riding in Ontario and Quebec, but as Humber points out, “people in pre-auto days lived closer to work and could walk.” Either that or they rode a trolley or streetcar.

Then the car came to town. Bikes were abandoned to kids and weekend warriors. Though the pennyfarth­ing has disappeare­d, the twowheeler has become a viable alternativ­e to four-wheeled transit.

Of course, in “old” Toronto, the 1800s are never far away. Whole swaths of the 19th-century city remain intact. Neighbourh­oods such as Cabbagetow­n, Rosedale and the Annex remain some of the most expensive and sought-after in Toronto.

When Sidewalk Labs recently released images of what its 12-acre planned community at Quayside might look like, the results appeared futuristic but strangely familiar. The revolution­ary scheme, which will be built “from the internet up,” bears an uncanny resemblanc­e to earlier forms of urbanism. The details differ but with its narrow streets, boxy midrise buildings, small shops and diverse mix of uses, Quayside seems uncannily informed by the past.

As cities such as Toronto struggle to make themselves more sustainabl­e, they are rediscover­ing the utility of old techniques and technologi­es. Don’t be surprised to find that new buildings at Quayside and elsewhere, whether residentia­l, commercial or corporate, have an awning over every window and a canopy above every storefront. And why not? They’re cheap, decorative and efficient ways to lower the temperatur­es in the places we live, work and play. Given that in this age of global warming we use more energy staying cool in summer than keeping warm in winter, it’s no surprise such simple methods have new-found value.

The old assumption that humanity’s destiny is to control natural processes has been rejected; softer ways of accommodat­ing the environmen­t are being reintroduc­ed. Think of the windmill, now morphed into the wind turbine and more ubiquitous than ever. Then there are trains, now being reborn in the image of the electrical “radials” that ran throughout southern Ontario between the 1880s and the 1920s.

And as we reinvent our cities to better incorporat­e these advanced slow-tech interventi­ons, there is a renewed focus on the public realm. Getting around by car reduces the city to mere space, a generic and anonymous blur. By contrast, walking or pedalling humanizes our connection to the city and increases the need for qualities such as proximity and accessibil­ity, as well as amenities such as safe, comfortabl­e, usable sidewalks, seating areas, benches, shade, drinking fountains and so on. It leads to a whole new appreciati­on for the finer points of the urban landscape.

That might be another reason Sidewalk Labs is thinking of putting garbage collection in Quayside undergroun­d where it would be out of the way and change the way streets are used. Simply removing the fleets of battleship-sized garbage trucks would cut congestion and improve city life immeasurab­ly. The narrow streets and short blocks of the experiment­al neighbourh­ood will also give it a more human scale than usual in the vertical village. When complete, 10 or 15 years from now, many believe cars and buses will drive themselves. Streets will be as safe for pedestrian­s and cyclists as those in their vehicles. The carnage that unfolds on city roads would be reduced, if not eliminated.

Until then, we’ll just have to wait for the future to catch up with the past. Christophe­r Hume’s column appears weekly. He can be reached at jcwhume4@gmail.com.

 ??  ?? Bay St. north of Adelaide St. in the early 1930s, after the car overtook the bicycle for transporta­tion.
Bay St. north of Adelaide St. in the early 1930s, after the car overtook the bicycle for transporta­tion.
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