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Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Save the Date: Sunday, February 4th

Hacking Toronto: Making a Better City

Last Sunday, I attended a meeting held in the Gladstone Hotel’s Melody Bar in which 20 or so people from the Accordion City technology, marketing, arts and media communities got together to discuss putting together a BarCamp-like workshop in which people could discuss the both possible improvements to the TTC website and the overall TTC experience. The intended result of this one-day brainstorming workshop would be a report that could be presented to the powers that be at the TTC, to which we believe we have access. We also hope that the event will inspire people to take on similar civic-minded projects focused on the TTC and beyond.

TTC (Toronto Transit Commission) logo.

I’m going to leave it to Mark “Remarkk!” Kuznicki to make the announcment (which he’ll make soon), but for now, keep Sunday, February 4th open in your calendar.

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Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Can Accordion City be an Alpha City?

Hacking Toronto: Making a Better City

Maria pointed me to a Globe and Mail article titled Does beta city have what it takes to be an alpha?. The basis for the article is a statement by Greg Clark, lead adviser to the British government on city development and a paid strategy adviser to TEDCO (Toronto Economic Development Corporation).

Here’s a snippet from the article:

Toronto, at the moment, is considered a “beta city” for its globalized business credentials, in the same league as San Francisco and Zurich.

“Can Toronto be an alpha city? Yes it can, in my opinion,” Mr. Clark said after addressing city council’s economic development committee yesterday. But Toronto will have to better co-ordinate all that it does with an aim to competing for business investment with cities around the world, he said.

And to transform Toronto into a major player on the world stage, Mr. Clark said, Mayor David Miller doesn’t necessarily need to win his fight for more money from the provincial and federal governments.

“There is a huge amount of capital that is out there available to invest in many of the things the city wants to invest in,” he said. “And if the city didn’t get a penny more, a cent more, from the provincial and federal governments, which obviously I hope it will, there are still are mechanisms” that it could use, such as public-private partnerships, tax-incentive financing and other “innovative tools.”

“. . . Nearly every city that made real progress in the last 10 years has done it using innovative finance in as much as using transfer payments from higher tiers of government,” Mr. Clark said.

According to Clark, the world’s leading cities are strong in these four areas:

  • Creative industries [Again, the Creative Class plays a key role!]
  • Tourism
  • The financial sector [Yes, suits are important]
  • “Power and influence”

Clark says that Toronto scores reasonably well in those areas and offers these specific advantages:

  • Being in North America but not in the United States
  • Our “extraordinary diversity”, which attracts global companies
  • Efforts like the MaRS innovation centre, which aims to turn new ideas into commercial businesses, (“an example of something Toronto does well but needs to do on much larger scale,” according to the article)

The article concludes with a “Ranking world cities” chart, which is based on work by the Globalization and World Cities Study Group, a research network that “focuses upon the external relations of world cities” centred at Britain’s Loughborough University.

The chart measures status as a “command point in the world economy” by assessing the comparative level of services in these areas, which researchers believe are key features of world-class cities.

  • Accountancy
  • Advertising
  • Banking and finance
  • Law

I’ve taken the chart and formatted it for the web, linking each city name to its corresponding Wikipedia entry. If you’re looking for data on ranking world cities for comparison’s sake or are just hoping to kill a lot of time on the web today, this chart is for you!

Alpha Cities First tier
Second tier
Beta Cities First tier
Second tier
Third tier
Gamma Cities First tier
Second tier
Third tier

A little side-note: the article was written by Globe and Mail staffer Jeff Gray, a friend of mine from Crazy Go Nuts University. We were section editors at the main school newspaper, the Queen’s Journal together, where he was the News editor and I edited a section called Misc, which ran on the back page and was a humour/”lifestyle” section.

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It Happened to Me Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Bettering the Better Way

The Better Way

Toronto Transit Commission logo.

The Toronto Transit Commission — a.k.a. the TTC — is Accordion City’s public transport authority, responsible for operating a city-wide transit system comprising a subway, buses, streetcars and light rail trains. In 2005, the TTC carried about 430 million passengers to their destinations, making it the third most-used mass transit system in North America (New York’s is the most-used, followed by Mexico City’s). A long-time catchphrase used in TTC advertising promotes them as “The Better Way”, which is where the title of this post comes from.

Recently, there’s been a lot of talk about the TTC web site. It’s so bad — from both the standpoints of usefulness and aesthetics — that it’s downright embarrassing:

Screen capture of the TTC site.
Actual screen capture of the TTC’s site. Click to visit the site and see the full ugliness for yourself.

A couple of weeks ago, local architect and civic-minded guy Robert Oullette wrote an article in his blog, Reading Toronto, titled How Would You Improve the TTC Web Site?. This article generated a lot of interest from the local blogosphere:

The press also chimed in:

Simply put, there are a lot of people in this city who care about the TTC and have have ideas for improving both the transit system and its site.

The Meeting

Last week, I met with a group of very active people in the Toronto tech and community scenes; this meeting was captured quite nicely by Will Pate in the photograph below:

TTC site meeting at Radiant Core.

The characters in this meeting were:

  • Yours Truly, bringing developer skills, blog juice and media whoring par excellence
  • David Crow, lending his expertise at rallying the local tech community, as well as his software development and interaction design skills
  • Madhava Enros, who has forgotten more about the TTC than most people will ever learn; he’s also an interaction designer
  • Mark Kuznicki, policy wonk extraordinaire
  • Will Pate, social media maven and all-round networker
  • Jay Goldman, organizer, coordinator, whip-cracker and owner of the meeting table
  • Michael Glenn, provider of technology expertise and back-end know-how

Jay took my minutes of the meeting and from them, wrote an excellent article on his company’s blog in which he summarized our discussion. Here’s his description:

Figuring that we know a thing or two about building websites, we thought that we could offer some useful feedback to compliment the already excellent thoughts collecting in the comments on the original blog posts. In addition to our Solutions and Portfolio of experience, we know lots of really smart people who could bring a lot of value to the table. And so we did exactly that and gathered a crack team in Radiant Core’s boardroom to scratch our heads and stroke our chins and ruminate on how we could help to better the better way.

Jay then expanded on my notes and wrote an excellent write-up of every idea and point brought up at the meeting. It’s long, but it covers a lot of ground and I recommend that you read it.

He concludes the article with these points:

The TTC should re-open the RFP for the Website Redesign.

The original RFP closed on Thursday, November 23, 2006 and received responses from a number of traditional web shops (you can find the RFP info by browsing the somewhat confusing and highly frame-based TTC Materials & Procurements site, or by going straight to the otherwise-framed P01DR06363). The Planned Award date is February 1st, 2007 (which recently changed from January 29th), but we think a strong case can be made for the requirements having changed substantial as a result of the change in Commission Chair and the process kicked off by Robert’s post – strong enough that the original RFP should be replaced.

The TTC should completely embrace the community.

Soliciting feedback via blogs is a great start, but we’d like to see Adam Giambrone extend that initiative by keeping the rest of this process open and transparent (keep an eye on this space for a forthcoming announcement on this very topic). Collecting feedback in such a public fashion is an amazing step forward and we salute it wholeheartedly! Let’s keep moving in the same direction.

The TTC should set a goal of building the best Transit Authority website in the world.

Our former Mayor, Mel Lastman, was perhaps overly found of calling Toronto a world-class city, but he was often right. Even the best Transit websites out there don’t set the bar very high and we feel that this is an opportunity to demonstrate our technology and transit leadership by establishing a new watermark.


There’ll be more happening soon — I’ll keep you folks posted. In the meantime, go read Jay’s article!

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Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

"Gypsy and the Hooch" Closes Down

Gypsy Co-op restaurant on Queen Street West, Toronto.

Carson T. Foster, Karaoke host with the most and one of Accordion City’s more colourful characters, pointed out in a comment that the Gypsy Co-op Restaurant (a.k.a. “Gypsy and The Hooch”) has closed its doors. Here are the stories I’ve been able to find online:

More commentary (and if I can dig them up, photos) later.

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Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

LizVang Returns for a Christmas Party — December 22nd at the Groundhog Pub

Lizvang!

For those of who move in the circles of the GTABloggers or the Toronto LiveJournal cohort, you’ll be pleased to know that LizVang will be back in Accordion City for a Christmas visit. To celebrate this, there’s going to be a party, and here are the details:

  • When: Friday, December 22nd at 8:00 p.m.
  • Where: The Groundhog Pub, 401 Bloor Street East (near Bloor and Sherbourne, very close to Sherbourne Station)
  • Why: Because most of us haven’t seen Liz in ages

In addition to good beer and good food, the Groundhog has one of the best karaoke libraries I’ve seen. C’mon, GTABloggers and LiveJournalers, let’s celebrate with Liz!

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Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

newmindspace’s "Jingle Bell Rock" Event, Tonight @ Union Station

Ad for newmindspace's 'Jingle Bell Rock' event, Friday, December 15th at 9:09 p.m., upper floor of Union Station, Toronto.

I’ve already got plans for this evening, but in case you haven’t got any and you like flash mob-ish events, local flash mob-esque event planners newmindspace are planning an event that takes place tonight at 9:09 p.m. on the upper floor of Union Station.

The event, in a nutshell:

  • Bring some kind of personal music player or music-making instrument or device that can output to headphones
  • Gather at Union Station’s upper floor
  • At 9:09 p.m., press “play” on your device, and dance to your headphone music — no blasting music out loud, just on your headphones.
  • The rules: Don’t disrupt the trains service and leave no trace!

If I were free, I’d bring my keytar and rock out.

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Geek Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Toronto Transit Google Map

[via Torontoist] Here’s another Google Map-based web application that you might find handy if you live in Accordion City: this interactive Toronto Transit Map, shown below:

This map takes a Google Map of Toronto and overlays it with the routes for the following transit systems:

  • TTC
  • Brampton Transit
  • Go Transit
  • Mississauga Transit
  • Vaughan Transit
  • VIVA

Just enter an address or intersection as you would into a Google Map, and you’ll see the routes around it.