Business Improvement Areas (BIAs) - or Business Improvement Districts as they are known in the United States - are self-taxing local bodies that play an important role in urban governance. Toronto, which was the location of the first BIA in the world, has one of the highest number of BIAs in North America, yet little is known about how these bodies differ across the city. Using a mixed methodological approach that includes geographic information systems mapping, quantitative analysis, and semi-structured interview data, this chapter addresses this gap in knowledge by offering a typology of Toronto BIAs, looking at the metrics of size, walkability/transit score, budgets, and year of formation. The study concludes that there are four kinds of...
By North American standards Toronto is a concentrated agglomeration. Its downtown has enjoyed specta...
This article examines Toronto’s community councils, a post-amalgamation creation meant to buffer the...
Active transportation modes in North America are often accounted as ‘white strips of gentrification’...
Business Improvement Areas (BIAs) - or Business Improvement Districts as they are known in the Unite...
This paper is part of the IMFG Papers on Municipal Finance and Governance series. For a full list of...
This paper examines whether Business Improvement Areas (BIAs) in the Durham Region are taking advant...
Local actors, including resident and business associations, do not simply influence decision-makers,...
While most British Columbians have probably never heard of Business Improvement Areas (BIAs) most ha...
In 1997, the Province of Ontario formed the City of Toronto, amalgamating one regional and six small...
In 1997, the Province of Ontario formed the City of Toronto, amalgamating one regional and six small...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis explains why the Toronto city-region underwent a...
The Greater Toronto Area (G.T.A.), Canada’s largest urban region, is currently facing a strenuous ex...
Business Improvement Districts (BIDs) are self-taxed organizations that are comprised of businesses ...
This paper seeks to examine processes of state restructuring in exploring the ways in which Busines...
This article examines Toronto’s community councils, a post-amalgamation creation meant to buffer the...
By North American standards Toronto is a concentrated agglomeration. Its downtown has enjoyed specta...
This article examines Toronto’s community councils, a post-amalgamation creation meant to buffer the...
Active transportation modes in North America are often accounted as ‘white strips of gentrification’...
Business Improvement Areas (BIAs) - or Business Improvement Districts as they are known in the Unite...
This paper is part of the IMFG Papers on Municipal Finance and Governance series. For a full list of...
This paper examines whether Business Improvement Areas (BIAs) in the Durham Region are taking advant...
Local actors, including resident and business associations, do not simply influence decision-makers,...
While most British Columbians have probably never heard of Business Improvement Areas (BIAs) most ha...
In 1997, the Province of Ontario formed the City of Toronto, amalgamating one regional and six small...
In 1997, the Province of Ontario formed the City of Toronto, amalgamating one regional and six small...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis explains why the Toronto city-region underwent a...
The Greater Toronto Area (G.T.A.), Canada’s largest urban region, is currently facing a strenuous ex...
Business Improvement Districts (BIDs) are self-taxed organizations that are comprised of businesses ...
This paper seeks to examine processes of state restructuring in exploring the ways in which Busines...
This article examines Toronto’s community councils, a post-amalgamation creation meant to buffer the...
By North American standards Toronto is a concentrated agglomeration. Its downtown has enjoyed specta...
This article examines Toronto’s community councils, a post-amalgamation creation meant to buffer the...
Active transportation modes in North America are often accounted as ‘white strips of gentrification’...