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T.O. owes debt to Jacobs

Toronto Star

More than most cities, Toronto owes a huge debt of gratitude to Jane Jacobs. Jacobs, who died yesterday eight days short of her 90th birthday, loved this city almost as much as it loved her. Even if she hadn't moved here from New York in 1968, she would have left this town a different place. But the mere fact of her presence, which the city wore like a badge of honour, ensured that her ideas were always close to the centre of any debate about the future of urbanism in Toronto. Plain-spoken, utterly unpretentious, self-taught and full of sly humour, Jacobs was disarming in the directness of her opinions. She despised jargon and railed against experts, especially planners and politicians, whom she considered the cause of many of the problems that have plagued North American cities since the end of World War II.