Garrison Creek is one of many ravines along Toronto’ s waterfront which have undergone numerous transformations since the establishment of Toronto as a city. Accelerated urbanization of the downtown core and waste dumping in these creeks persuaded city officials towards hygienic interventions. Over the last century, sewage infrastructure overcame natural streams, ravine bridges were buried, and building parcels overlaid sloping topography. Reminders of the creek permeate the city through winding side streets, buried bridges and sunken parks. Extreme urban flooding during the 8th of July, 2013 storm resurfaced questions to whether burying natural watersheds have been more beneficial or detrimental to the health of Lake Ontario. This thes...
My proposal envisions the threshold between the built urban fabric and the natural environment at t...
Although urban runoff is a known cause of impairment for waterbodies, questions remain about the eff...
On Toronto’s east-central waterfront, the Port Lands project is transforming an area that used to be...
A century after the burial of Garrison Creek, Toronto continues to experience urban floods and unple...
Toronto’s Garrison Creek has gained a near mythical quality in both the minds and the plans of the c...
Once the founding site of the city of Toronto and its second largest watercourse, the Garrison Creek...
Thesis (M.C.P.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2011.Ca...
This thesis is a reflection on the impacts of suburban sprawl on ecosystem health and biodiversity i...
The Don River once travelled from the Oak Ridges Moraine, through dense forests, to empty into a lar...
This thesis investigates urban strategies to restore ecological and social permeability in underutil...
Wilket Creek is a second order stream located in Toronto, Ontario. Over the past decade, management...
This report demonstrates how green stormwater infrastructure in public streets and green spaces can ...
My project deals with one of the greatest resources on earth: water. Increasing populations and land...
In urban centres we rely on our built environment to support infrastructure like storm water managem...
Today, Toronto is revered among Great Lakes ' and waterfront cities for its environmental plann...
My proposal envisions the threshold between the built urban fabric and the natural environment at t...
Although urban runoff is a known cause of impairment for waterbodies, questions remain about the eff...
On Toronto’s east-central waterfront, the Port Lands project is transforming an area that used to be...
A century after the burial of Garrison Creek, Toronto continues to experience urban floods and unple...
Toronto’s Garrison Creek has gained a near mythical quality in both the minds and the plans of the c...
Once the founding site of the city of Toronto and its second largest watercourse, the Garrison Creek...
Thesis (M.C.P.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2011.Ca...
This thesis is a reflection on the impacts of suburban sprawl on ecosystem health and biodiversity i...
The Don River once travelled from the Oak Ridges Moraine, through dense forests, to empty into a lar...
This thesis investigates urban strategies to restore ecological and social permeability in underutil...
Wilket Creek is a second order stream located in Toronto, Ontario. Over the past decade, management...
This report demonstrates how green stormwater infrastructure in public streets and green spaces can ...
My project deals with one of the greatest resources on earth: water. Increasing populations and land...
In urban centres we rely on our built environment to support infrastructure like storm water managem...
Today, Toronto is revered among Great Lakes ' and waterfront cities for its environmental plann...
My proposal envisions the threshold between the built urban fabric and the natural environment at t...
Although urban runoff is a known cause of impairment for waterbodies, questions remain about the eff...
On Toronto’s east-central waterfront, the Port Lands project is transforming an area that used to be...