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Join international and local experts in thought-provoking discussions that will address:
- The symbiotic relationship between city design and public transportation
- Encouraging appropriately scaled development along transit lines
- Creating beautiful streets that include transit
- Capturing value from transit investments
- Building public support for a transit-based city
Symposium Outline
Day 1: THURSDAY November 19 6:30 p.m. – 9:30 p.m.
City-Building and Transit:
Introduction by Mayor David Miller, City of Toronto
A panel discussion moderated by Matt Galloway (CBC Radio)
Presenters:
- Robert Cervero, Professor of City Regional Planning: Director, University of California
- Mariia Zimmerman, Vice President for Policy, Reconnecting America, Washington D.C.
Local Panelists:
- Paul Bedford, Metrolinx Board Member and Former City of Toronto Chief Planner
- Deborah Cowen, Professor at University of Toronto
- Adam Giambrone, Councillor and TTC Chair
- Ralph Giannone, Principal Architect, Giannone Petricone Associates
- Cynthia Wilkey, Chair, West Don Lands Committee
Location: City Hall, Council Chambers, 3rd floor - 100 Queen Street West, Toronto ON M5H 2N2 Cost: FREE
This panel discussion is open to the public. Space is limited; please R.S.V.P to: protocol@toronto.ca
Day 2: FRIDAY November 20 8 a.m. – 12 noon
CUI Breakfast Seminar:
Introduction remarks by TTC Chair Councillor Adam Giambrone
- Session Chaired by: Lee Parsons, Metrolinx Board Member
- Keynote address by Paul Goldberger, Architecture Critic for The New Yorker
- Case studies from four international cities: Paris, Zurich, Portland and the San Francisco Bay Area
Location:
The Four Seasons Hotel, 21 Avenue Road, Toronto ON M5R 2G1
Registrations and fees required. Visit canurb.com/events
Lunch with Paul Goldberger
12 noon - 2 p.m.
Registrations and fees required. Visit canurb.com/events
Day 2: FRIDAY November 20
Free Concurrent Sessions: 2 p.m. – 5 p.m.
These sessions are open to the public and free. Space is limited; please R.S.V.P to: protocol@toronto.ca
Locations:
- The Church of the Redeemer 162 Bloor Street West, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1M4
- The Four Seasons Hotel 21 Avenue Road, Toronto Ontario M5R 2G1
SESSION A
Design and Built Form: Integration of planning and infrastructure along the right-of-way
Moderator: David Leinster, Partner, Planning Partnership
- Rick Merrill, Partner, The Planning Partnership
- Melanie Hare, Partner, Urban Strategies
- John Hillier, Partner, DTAH
- Cal Brook, Partner, bmi I Pace
- Remi Ferredj, Director, RATP Paris
SESSION B
Implementation/Making it Happen: Successful business case studies
Moderator: Leslie Woo, Vice President, Transportation Policy and Planning-Metrolinx
- Frank Giannone, President, Fram Building Group
- Ian Dobson, Principal of Real Estate Corp
- G.B. Arrington, Senior Practitioner, Parsons Brinkerhoff
SESSION C
Public Awareness: Consultation Methodology
Moderator: Jeff Evenson, Principal, connector, Canadian Urban Institute
- Tim Griffin, Director, Saint Paul on the Mississippi Design Center
- Councillor Mihevc, City of Toronto Councillor
- John Danahy, Professor Landscape Architecture, City of Toronto
Please check this website for room assignments and updates on the symposium closer to the date of the event.
Transit in the Greater Toronto Area
Toronto and the GTA have recently unveiled transit proposals that will, when implemented, propel the region back into the ranks of the world's great transit cities. Metrolinx has announced ambitious plans to link previously disconnected car-oriented suburban communities across the GTA with a series of rapid transit lines. In Toronto, the TTC and Metrolinx are about to break ground on one of the largest transit system expansions in North America. A grid of new accessible light-rail lines laid out over the entire city will provide efficient and frequent service to previously under-served neighbourhoods and business areas and connect with existing subway, bus and streetcar lines.
How cities grow with transit
Over the past several years we have done a lot of great work to move these transit projects from vision to reality. A key consideration is how the city will continue to grow up around these now transit-serviced areas. What do great transit cities look like and how can they be designed? Development often follows major public transportation investments and is a wonderful means of transforming cities and regions from dispersed and car-oriented areas to more sustainable-patterned centres. These patterns encourage and support not only transit, but cycling and pedestrian activity, while providing the necessary infrastructure to support vibrant pedestrian-oriented retail, community and cultural facilities and higher density housing.
Be part of the discussion
Designing a city around transit raises a number of questions: What form should the new transit-oriented development take? How dense should it be? Should it be arrayed along the corridors or concentrated at major nodes? What should the streets look like? How much space should be devoted to transit, cars, parking, bicycles and pedestrians? How should the buildings frame the street? Does the housing attract area empty-nesters wanting to stay in the neighbourhood? What are the retail strategies? Do we even need development to support transit?
The Designing Transit Cities Symposium
The Designing Transit Cities Symposium is a two-day event aimed at exploring these and other related questions with experts from successful international transit-oriented cities. You will hear from experts from Paris, Madrid, Zurich, Portland and San Francisco who have a strong track record in building cities where transit supports good development and vice versa. Out-of-town experts Paul Goldberger, Robert Cervero and Mariia Zimmerman, as well as local politicians designers and transit experts, including Mayor David Miller, TTC Chair Councillor Adam Giambrone and Paul Bedford, Metrolinx Board Member and Former City of Toronto Chief Planner, grapple with these important city design issues in a series of panel discussions, presentations and workshops.
This symposium is brought to you by:

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