A lot of people say that North American suburbia can’t be saved, that because of how these neighbourhoods are just built for the car, you can’t just take that space back. Thing is, though, Edmonton isn’t some naturally dense city like Vancouver or Montréal is. It’s a typical Canada/US city for the most part. It has all the room to sprawl, and over the past century it certainly has.
But the fact is, a road like 132 Avenue that takes space away from cars to give it to people, something that is basically a Dutch road design, is being built here. Not Vancouver, with its high degree of natural walkability. Not Montréal, with its recent drive for more bike infrastructure. Not Toronto, the largest city in the country.
This proves it can be done, and given time, it will be done.
The greatest part of this is cities can’t say that “oh, we can’t do that, we’re not Amsterdam”, because Edmonton is far from Amsterdam, and we built it first.
If it can be done here, it can be done anywhere, and I think this should serve as a reality check for other cities in Canada and the USA.