• corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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    3 days ago

    There are lots of places with apartments on the 2nd floor and businesses on the 1st floor?

    Yes. You may not believe it from the incredulous-sounding question as you’ve written it, but ‘mixed-use’ is the standard for new buildings here, for instance.

    1. pedestrian-targeted commercial on main/ground
    2. professional services - lawyers, accountants, physios, clinics, tech - on levels 2-5
    3. potentially hotel or low-income housing on 5-10, depending on need
    4. residential above that,
    5. rooftop patio/common space

    Newer buildings here are getting loading bays in the garage: so 5-ton trucks just go into the parkade for a loading dock and a freight elevator. Buildings targeted to ‘market rental’ will often have a loading bay JUST for moving trucks.

    The brand new 35fl building in this region may be targeted at new doctors interning at the local teaching hospital: they’re just across the street. Rumours abound about posh SROs with in-suite W/D (perfect for new docs) and a skybridge connecting the pro-serv level to the hospital.

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      There are lots of places with apartments on the 2nd floor and businesses on the 1st floor?

      Yes. You may not believe it from the incredulous-sounding question as you’ve written it, but ‘mixed-use’ is the standard for new buildings here, for instance.

      There’s a vast difference between mixed-use being “standard for new buildings” and having “lots of places” (measured relative to the decades upon decades worth of existing housing stock, which is almost entirely Euclidean-zoned and single-family only) be mixed-use.