Valentine Makhouleen — interactive art director
+1-416-857-2834
val@new-media.ca

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These are my thoughts. I have lots of them and sometimes the odd one makes it to the surface.
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Mimico waterfront disaster

Mimico waterfront: Another “wall of condos” disaster in the making?

In 1997 Doug Holyday, then mayor of Etobicoke, announced plans for a new neighbourhood: Humber Bay Shores. The former “motel strip” — a seedy area south of Lake Shore Blvd. W. and east of Park Lawn Rd. — saw its first new condo a year later.

Since then, highrises have sprouted like toadstools.

“There’s very large numbers of people in buildings that are just higgledy-piggledy scattered across that area. There’s no coherent pattern of public spaces, there’s no shopping or retail,” says Ken Greenberg, an architect and urban designer who has consulted for Waterfront Toronto.

“It’s one of the most egregious, terrible examples of lack of any kind of decent planning one can think of.”

Some may disagree. But many in Mimico — the next community over, where a massive revitalization plan known as “Mimico 20/20” is underway — look east to Humber Bay Shores as a warning.

“The multi-multi-multi-storey buildings? It scares me,” says Bob Poldon, president of the Mimico Residents Association.

Via The Star

Having lived in the area for several years, I truly believe that the high-rise condos on the water are the last thing Mimico needs.

Why can’t our city learn to capitalize on one of our greatest assets (the lake) and instead allows unimaginative, greedy developers permanently change the face of the city? Why are we building a shoebox of a city instead of a tourist destination?

Do you think ten years from now Toronto will take the top spot in National Geographic’s Top Trolley Rides? With a view of hideous concrete and glass – I doubt it.

Toronto doesn’t lack imagination – it lacks leadership to translate it to sound development policy.

May 2012

Toronto Type

Toronto Type is a website showcasing typography in Toronto.

Toronto Type

April 2012

Creating a sustainable city

Freiburg, Germany has become a stunning model of sustainability, thanks in part to Wulf Daseking, the city’s Head of Urban Planning since 1984.

For Professor Wulf Daseking, the City of Freiburg’s Head of Urban Planning, longevity and continuity aren’t just buzzwords on a whiteboard but themes to live and plan by. After 26 years at the helm of Germany’s Environmental Capital, Daseking embodies the notion of sustainability in a city that has seen only four planning directors since World War II.

However, the secret ingredient that earned Freiburg the Academy of Urbanism’s European City of the Year Award in 2010 is Daseking’s flair for bold and unconventional thinking. From Seepark, a former gravel pit turned recreational eco-park, to Wiehrebahnhof, an old train station cooperatively rebuilt into a thriving cultural arts center, the Professor’s fingerprints are all over the projects in the “you can’t do that” category.

Read the intervew

August 2011

TTC Riders

If you live in Toronto, are concerned about public transit and feel like our current city administration is taking us for a ride, this group might be a good fit for you.

Our goal is to build a strong and vibrant transit advocacy group that gives a voice to the interests and concerns of the millions of us who use the TTC.

Are You Concerned about Transit in Toronto? Then Join the Crowd!

Thousands of transit users from across the city want a TTC that works for them.
Now you have chance to be heard and make real changes.
Join us for the founding meeting of TTCriders, Toronto’s new voice for transit riders, and help us reshape how Toronto does transit.

Wednesday June 22nd, 2011
7:00pm – 9:00pm
North York Civic Centre
5100 Yonge Street (at North York Centre Subway station)
Committee Room 3

May 2011

Pieces of Liberty

Head of Statue of Liberty

Paris, 1883

Torch of Statue of Liberty

Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia, 1876

March 2010