Worst suburb in Greater Vancouver/GTA
#31

My wife's Aunt had one the other day.
It was all nicey nicey with a bit about respecting each others cultures, blah blah blah, but urinating in public or others property cannot be accepted, blah blah blah. Then something about if found, the police will be involved, blah blah blah.
It did start by welcoming people to the area though
It was all nicey nicey with a bit about respecting each others cultures, blah blah blah, but urinating in public or others property cannot be accepted, blah blah blah. Then something about if found, the police will be involved, blah blah blah.
It did start by welcoming people to the area though


#32
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Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 1,088












Nonsense

#33

Nonsense[/QUOTE]
It seemed safe enough when I was visiting in the ‘70s but when I was living there in ‘83 there were a lot of bad crimes. I played darts regularly in the Blue Horizon down on Denman and the walk down Robson and back was the scary bit. Late at night, no dawdlers on the street. As I said, not too sure about now, but for a long time I didn‘t feel safe down there. Even when I was staying in the Regent and the only place I wouldn‘t go in was the Sunrise I felt safer at night on skid row than I did in the west end., and that was before my friends were killed there.
It seemed safe enough when I was visiting in the ‘70s but when I was living there in ‘83 there were a lot of bad crimes. I played darts regularly in the Blue Horizon down on Denman and the walk down Robson and back was the scary bit. Late at night, no dawdlers on the street. As I said, not too sure about now, but for a long time I didn‘t feel safe down there. Even when I was staying in the Regent and the only place I wouldn‘t go in was the Sunrise I felt safer at night on skid row than I did in the west end., and that was before my friends were killed there.
Last edited by caretaker; Jun 28th 2012 at 12:30 pm.

#34
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Joined: Dec 2008
Location: Vancouver, BC
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The rest of Langley, however? Blech.
I'd rather live in Whalley.

#35

I agree with your first sentence.
Transit ? 502 bus every 15 mins to Surrey seems pretty fair to me and yes I have used it during rush hours.
Commute is long ? Depends where you are commuting too, surely ? My commute from Cloverdale to Langley was 20 mins rain or shine. If you want to work in Vancouver, don't live in Langley. That much is pretty obvious. The hanging gardens of Babylon are very pretty, but that is an even longer commute to Vancouver and the transit is not so hot there either.

#36
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Thread Starter
Joined: Dec 2008
Location: Vancouver, BC
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well - yah.
but most work is in vancouver, so that does matter.
anyway i'd rahter live in Surrey.
but most work is in vancouver, so that does matter.
anyway i'd rahter live in Surrey.

#37

Alpha St. (Burnaby/Border E. Van)
If it did not have some green space behind it one would think they were in Beruit.
FROTSUK
If it did not have some green space behind it one would think they were in Beruit.
FROTSUK

#38










Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 14,227












The urban parts of cities in the fraser valley are all shit - no exceptions. And if you want a job paying decent money, well there aren't really any of those either.

#39
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Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 1


Please can someone elaborate on why Bramton and Missisigua are no go area? And where else can one land in GTA? Cheers

#40
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Joined: Sep 2011
Location: Cumbernauld, near Glasgow
Posts: 220












I would turn the Toronto argument completely on it's head by saying that there is almost nowhere in T.O I would want to live. With it's rundown, overpopulated, congested, overpriced and excessively diverse/segregated neighbourhoods. The parts that are pleasant are now so expensive that they offer no value to most immigrants. Downtown is now condoville - cheaply built one bedroom apartments for Canadian 30 somethings, waiting for - when they feel - the time is right to have children. Compensation dogs are in abundance.
One area I do like though is Rouge Park. Even though it's right next to that big bomb!
One area I do like though is Rouge Park. Even though it's right next to that big bomb!

#41

Essentially because you'll be spending £25k-£40k to move to the equivalent of Slough when you could do so a lot more easily in Britain without the VISA hassles.

#42
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Joined: Jul 2004
Location: Mississauga, Ontario
Posts: 228












This thread appears to be more about open warfare on the stereotyped lifestyles of non-European immigrants, and less on suburban areas whose quality of living is correlated with infrastructure, transportation, property taxes and a myriad of other factors not related to the colour of someone's skin.
I could talk about the smalll minded WASP racists of Georgetown or parochial Brits I met in Burlington who still haven't integrated into Canadian society - but I won't - I'll leave that to someone else.
I could talk about the smalll minded WASP racists of Georgetown or parochial Brits I met in Burlington who still haven't integrated into Canadian society - but I won't - I'll leave that to someone else.
Last edited by Cyan; Jul 3rd 2012 at 7:09 pm.

#43

There's this sort of prevailing attitude that once you put some roads in the work is done, the idea of making things actually look nice and are well organized seems to be an afterthought. It seems like in the US they do a better job at making small cities and towns at least have some character and personality instead of just grey blah.

#44
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Thread Starter
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Location: Vancouver, BC
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There's this sort of prevailing attitude that once you put some roads in the work is done, the idea of making things actually look nice and are well organized seems to be an afterthought. It seems like in the US they do a better job at making small cities and towns at least have some character and personality instead of just grey blah.

#45
Forum Regular

Joined: Jun 2012
Location: Canada
Posts: 36


Agreed. One thing I will never understand is why the built environment has to be so freaking ugly and functional. It's also often extremely impersonal - huge blocks with massive buildings. There seems to be no expecation of buildings being interesting or pretty...they got it in the 19th Century, why not now?
Anyways, back to OPs quesitons:
A lot of Toronto has been built up and changed over the last 10 years due to cheap money and the housing boom. Places that used to be drug hangouts and crazy towns (places where I used to have to walk and step over blood, vomiting aboriginals and homeless people with needles in their arms have been re-faced with trendy coffee shops and trendy artsy lofts). Buyer and mover beware: this was how it was for a very long time. It only changed recently in the last 10 or so years. So if I were a fortune teller and I said, there is a chance it could go back to the way it was within the next 10 or so years, I could have a good case.

Anyways, for TO, places to stay away from these days:
- South side of Etobicoke to Mississauga along Lakeshore before you hit the credit river.
- some south old parts of Mississauga.
- some parts of Scarborough. google.
- Far west end of Parkdale in downtown
- Some parts of Crazy Ossington & Queen to King[1]
