
The Good News
There are some really well-priced and well-designed apartments in the new buildings as well as some excellent rental and geared-to-income housing. It is exciting to see the long-awaited changes and be a part of a new and changing community.
The Bad News
This area is still defined by a large amount of growth and development. As is the case in so many downtown neighbourhoods, you do have to get used to construction, the occasional traffic bunch-up, but all in the name of progress.
Homes, Architecture, and Real Estate
For years Cabbagetown residents awaited the long-promised reworking of the original Cabbagetown — reborn in the 1940s as Canada’s largest and oldest social housing project, Regent Park.
In the past 10 years, it has become home for many new Canadians and their families making for a lively and diverse neighbourhood as well as bringing lots more street traffic to Parliament St, south of Gerrard.
In the past couple of years, some of the tenement housing has come down; cranes have gone up and so have nicely designed apartment and condominium towers.
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Streets are starting to appear where barricades existed and now cars and residents can saunter on the newly landscaped thoroughfares. Banks, coffee shops, and a new Sobey’s Fresh market is creating an extended shopping area south of Gerrard St.
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