In a context of growing car dependency and suburban sprawl, planners search
for ways of intensifying urban development and reducing reliance on the au
tomobile. The creation of planned mixed-use centres intended to become hubs
of transit and pedestrian movement within the dispersed suburban environme
nt represents one such intensification strategy. I investigate three suburb
an mixed-use centres in the Greater Toronto Area, selected for their advanc
ed level of development, and identify the planning rationales and objective
s that have led to their creation. To verify the extent to which they meet
their intensification goal, I monitor the three selected centres' level of
development, modal split, land-use pattern, inner synergy, and inner moveme
nts. Findings are mixed. If the suburban centres have been successful in at
tracting development and attaining levels of transit use, pedestrian moveme
nt and inner synergy exceeding those of the typical suburban area, they are
not as distinct from the remainder of the suburb as intended and thus fall
short from their planning objectives. I conclude that a strategy combining
the creation of nodes (such as suburban mixed-use centres) with high-densi
ty, transit-oriented corridors within the suburban environment would be mor
e effective in bringing intensification to this portion of the metropolitan
region.